Sold Date:
April 28, 2021
Start Date:
April 5, 2021
Final Price:
$500.00
(AUD)
Seller Feedback:
1687
Buyer Feedback:
0
–
The Dark Side Of The Moon
March 1973 - UK First Issue
1973
first UK issue, with A2 B2 run-out matrices, and Solid Blue Triangle
labels.
Midnight Blue gatefold sleeve is in VG condition, no splits, tears or writing - see the pics
Comes with One poster (of the band) with the UK catalog number on the bottom right. Excellent condition.
The vinyl record Side 1 is in Very Good condition, but on the lower half of the grade.
The audio is VG - Side one plays with some crackle and pops in the heartbeat intro, then plays well until the very start of "Time" "Time" has a non-feelable scratch across it, and plays with a low to moderate singular, but persistent tic.
It starts when the clocks are ticking, then is completely buried when the alarms are all going off, then it returns as the alarms subside, and remains fairly persistent until the drum solo part ends.
The singing part plays very well, but a couple of buried singular tics can just be heard in this part, though not many, and it is starting to fade away.
By the time the guitar solo starts, it is playing clean, and plays well for the rest of the record, with some pops toward the end of "Great Gig In The Sky - Side 1 does have some audio imperfections, but the imperfections are surrounded by clean clear audio - Side 1 is still very listenable all the way through, and outside of the surface tics and pops, the audio is still high quality, and dynamic. None of the imperfections are loud or ugly, but I would say that it is more the persistence of the singular tic in the first half of "Time" that is a mild annoyance, but the song is still worthy, and enjoyable (the guitar solo is superb)
Side 2 is far better, and plays with just a small handful of very light imperfections, and just like side 1, the actual audio quality is superb. This side is visually VG+ and the audio is a high VG+, but not quite excellent.
The overall grade for the vinyl, both audio and visual, is VG.
The labels
Are in Excellent condition, no writing, clean, with an unworn spindle hole, and the spindle hole is punched dead centre of the triangle, which is quite rare, as they are most often punched slightly off centre.... I often wonder why they bothered with the black spot marking the centre of the label, because they rarely ever hit it!
The vinyl record is VG
The labels are VG+
The gate-fold cover is VG
The poster is Excellent.
The inner sleeve is not original, it does not have the patent numbers.
This is still a decent playing record, but side 1 is far from perfect audio wise, but it is still a worthy listen. It looks brilliant in your hand, with good shine, and lovely labels The gatefold sleeve is solid, with no splits, tears or writing, just suffers from some surface and edge wear to the ink.
Label:
– SHVL 804,
– 1E 064 o 05249
Format:
, LP, Album, Gatefold Sleeve
Country:
Released:
Genre:
Style:
,
Tracklist
A1
Speak To Me
A2
Breathe
A3
On The Run
A4
Time
A5
The Great Gig In The Sky Vocals –
B1
Money Saxophone –
B2
Us And Them Saxophone –
B3
Any Colour You Like
B4
Brain Damage
B5
Eclipse
Companies, etc.
Record Company
–
Recorded At
–
Phonographic Copyright (p)
–
Published By
–
Pressed By
–
Pressed By
–
Printed By
–
Made By
–
Credits
Artwork [Sleeve Art, Stickers Art]
–
*
Backing Vocals
–
,
,
,
Bass, Vocals, Synthesizer [VCS3], Effects [Tape]
–
Design [Sleeve], Photography By
–
Engineer
–
Engineer [Assistant]
–
Keyboards, Vocals, Synthesizer [VCS3]
–
Lyrics By
–
Music By
–
Percussion, Effects [Tape]
–
Producer
–
Supervised By [Mixing]
–
Vocals, Guitar, Synthesizer [Vcs3]
–
Written-By
–
* (tracks: A2 to A4, B3),
* (tracks: A1, A4, B3),
* (tracks: A2, A4, A5, B2, B3),
* (tracks: A2 to A4, B1, B2, B4, B5)
Notes
Recorded at Abbey Road Studios, London between June 1972 and January 1973.
℗ 1973 The Gramophone Co. Ltd.
Made in Gt. Britain
E.M.I Records (The Gramophone Co. Ltd.) Hayes · Middlesex · England
File under POPULAR : Pop Groups
_______________
This
is the original form of the release, it has solid light blue prism LP
picture labels with silver lettering, later forms have an empty prism.
It has a gatefold sleeve, and there are several known variations - see
below. Originally delivered with 2 posters and 2 stickers.
There
are 2 systems for track numbering on the release. The cover lists the
titles A1 to B5 (used in this submission). The labels however number the
tracks from (a) to (i) so, for example, "Breathe" is listed as
"(a)(II)" on the label but "2" on the cover (see images).
The
following is a guide to identifying the elements that make up the first
pressing, but for a more comprehensive guide it is best to refer to the
Pink Floyd Archives website
Huge numbers were pressed to meet
advance orders and there are 88 documented run out variations. There are
several variations of sleeves, posters and stickers, and as these were
produced by different companies and delivered to the pressing plant at
different times there are several combinations.
1. The label has a solid light blue prism.
2. 'The Gramophone Co.' text starts at 10 o'clock on label.
3. A-2/B-2 matrix stamps appear in the runout area.
4. There are 2 ink variations used for printing sleeve Midnight blue and black .
5.
There are 3 sleeve opening variations. 1. The right front opening of
the gatefold cover is sealed with the two sides glued together. 2. The
right front opening of the gatefold cover is sealed with a fold over
flap that is glued inside the opening. 3. The right front opening of the
gatefold cover is not sealed.
6. Inner sleeve is a distinctive
polythene lined die cut black semi matt paper with white printed text
stating 2 patent numbers bottom left [1125555/1072844] and 'MADE IN
GREAT BRITAIN' bottom right.
7. Posters and stickers were printed on either matte or gloss paper
8.
Stickers may have printed backs with diagonal lines across them, and
the words 'Fasson' 'FasPrint' and 'Crack-Back', or plain white backs
with the word "Permanaent"
9. Some copies came with a small round
sticker on the front cover stating "Pink Floyd The Dark Side of the
Moon" (confirmed for stampers GL/MO). Early cover stickers are a
lighter, faded grey-purple/blueish colour and measure ~67mm diameter,
later cover stickers are a darker black and measure ~62mm diameter.
10.
Some early copies have a manufacturing defect on the track Money, where
the song skips. This only appears to affect some records made with
A2/B2 stampers
This first edition was initially pressed by , from July 1st, 1973 by its legal successor, at the same plant.
International E.M.I. catalog number 1E 064 o 05249 appears in small fonts and parentheses on the cover rear.
Note on Credits:
Though
credited for the entire album, Barry St John, Doris Troy, Lesley
Duncan, and Liza Strike perform backing vocals only on tracks A4, B2,
B4, and B5.
Barcode and Other Identifiers
Matrix / Runout (Side A label): (SHVL 804A) Matrix / Runout (Side B label): (SHVL 804B) Other (Printer date/format code, gatefold inner): Ⓛ 7303 TPS Other (Patent No.s on inner sleeve): 1125555 1072844 Matrix / Runout (Side A runout, stamped, variant 1): SHVL 804 A-2 1 GH (1st Master 1st Mother 17th Stamper)
Matrix / Runout (Side B runout, stamped, variant 1): SHVL 804 B-2 3 TO (1st Master 3rd Mother 95th Stamper) A few words about
condition.
Grade &
score out of 100
GRADING
Mint is a
Rigid Band - The next Four Grades are all
Narrow Bands, that slightly widen as the
condition gradually deteriorates - Good is
still Good, but there is a rapid widening
of the Grade Bands, as the condition
deteriorates over the last Four grades.
MINT
100
The
record itself is in brand new condition with
no surface marks or deterioration in sound
quality.
The cover and any
extra items such as the lyric sheet,
booklet or poster are in perfect
condition.
Only graded on records that are sealed or
clearly unplayed.
NEAR
MINT
97 to 99
EXCELLENT
90 to 96
The record shows
virtually no signs of having been played,
there is no lessening in sound quality.
The cover and
packaging might have the slightest of
tiny defects.
The record shows some slight signs of having
been played, but there is very little, (if
any) lessening in sound quality.
The cover and
packaging might have very slight
wear.
VERY
GOOD PLUS
80 to 89
VERY GOOD
69 to 79
The record shows signs
of having been played, but there is very
little lessening in sound quality.
The cover and
packaging might have slight wear, light
creasing.
The record has obviously been played many
times, but displays no major deterioration in
sound quality, despite noticeable surface
marks and the occasional light scratch.
Normal wear and tear
on the cover or extra items, without any
major defects.
This is an above average
used record, that has been well looked
after.
GOOD
56 to 68
The
record has been played so much that the sound
quality has deteriorated, but the record will
still play through, and it will not be a
completely unpleasant listening experience,
even at the bottom of this grade (56).
The cover and
contents may suffer from folding, scuffing
of edges, spine splits, discolouration,
etc.
FAIR
41 to 55
The
record is still playable but has not been
cared for properly and displays considerable
surface noise; it may even stick, skip or
jump.. This is starting to be an unpleasant
listening experience at the top of the grade
(55) and will not be a pleasant listening
experience at all by the end of it (41).
The cover and
contents will be torn, stained and/or
defaced.
POOR
25 to 40
The
record will not play properly due to
scratches, bad surface noise, etc.
The cover and
contents will be badly damaged or partly
missing.
BAD
0 - 24
The
record is unplayable or might even be broken,
and is only of use as a collection-filler.
The Sleeve is non
existent (0) or what is left, is only just
recognisable.
A few words about postage.
Within Australia, the best value for multiple purchases is a 5KG satchel, where as many as 15 to 20 LPs can be posted for $22.00 registered post. (well packed in a box, inside the satchel)
My Policies on postage are simple.