Sold Date:
April 1, 2021
Start Date:
March 8, 2021
Final Price:
$114.00
$95.00
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
14908
Buyer Feedback:
70
MEMORIES OF ELVIS
Rare 1990 4-hour radio show from Unistar Radio Programming, celebrating the life and times of Elvis Presley.
This 4-LP set, complete with cue sheets, is a pleasurable listen for both the Elvis songs and the interviews (Floyd Cramer, Chet Atkins, Doc Pomus, Hal Blaine, Carl Perkins, D.J. Fontana, George Weiss, Gordon Stoker of the Jordanaires, Boots Randolph, and Ronnie Milsap).
This was played once on the air in 1990, then put on the DJ’s personal shelf at home. Untouched since then. NON-SMOKER HOME. Cue sheets and letter are in great shape.
As you likely know, radio shows such as this were never available for public purchase and were extremely limited in production, going only to radio stations that subscribed to Unistar. This set is in superb condition.
YOUR RECORDS WILL BE PACKED WITH CARE.
IF YOU ARE BUYING MULTIPLE RECORDS FROM ME WAIT UNTIL I SEND AN INVOICE
TO PAY TO SAVE MONEY ON SHIPPING.
PLEASE EMAIL ME WITH QUESTIONS,CHEERS!
Mint (M)Perfect Condition, which basically means that it is as good as new, literally. The vinyl has to look new and sound as though it was never played, and the cover has to look untouched. Some argue that the only mint records are brand new unopened ones still in their original packing.
Near Mint (NM)Vinyl is near perfect. At most, a light scuff appears on the record, but it should play without any noise or skips. The record sleeve should also be near perfect with only minor signs of wear. There should be no" outline sleeve.)
Using the word good for this quality of record is, in the opinion of JRS, too generous and not recommended since it may be misleading. Records described as fair are ones that are basically unlistenable. Surface noise, skips and pops make hearing what's on the record nearly impossible, if not completely impossible. The cover is falling apart, torn, and has writing all over it. The only reason to keep it would be if the record is extremely rare or you want to eventually melt the vinyl and shape it into an ashtray.