Gripsweat is shutting down. Starting on February 1st, 2025 the site will no longer be doing daily updates, adding any new items, or accepting new memberships. The site will continue to run in this "historical" mode until January 1st, 2026, when the site will go offline. More information is available here.
Sold Date:
April 15, 2014
Start Date:
April 5, 2014
Final Price:
£9.99
(GBP)
Bid Count:
1
Seller Feedback:
2602
Buyer Feedback:
153
This item is not for sale. Gripsweat is an archive of past sales and auctions, none of the items are available for purchase.
The Epileptics: 7" vinyl Single
Original 1st pressing
A: Target On My Back, What've You Got To Smile About
B: Tube Disaster, Two Years Too Late
Spiderleg Records 1981
Condition of vinyl & sleeve is ex/vg as per Record Collector Grading. Sleeve showing signs of creasing & ringwear
Bidders with a zero feedback please email before bidding or your bid will be automatically cancelled
Buyers Please Note:
All items sent £2.50 2nd class recorded delivery in the UK, Europe £9.00 International Signed For & Worldwide £10.00 International Signed For.
Records are sent in 7" mailers with stiffeners
Postage discounts available for multiple purchases:
UK 1-2 additional 7" vinyl no extra charge, each additional £0.50
European Union 1 additional 7" no extra charge, each additional £1.00
Rest of World 1 additional 7" no extra charge, each additional £1.00
Record Collector Grading Guidelines:
Mint 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. Records advertised as sealed or unplayed should be mint
Excellent The record shows some signs of having been played, but there is very little lessening in sound quality. The cover and packaging might have slight wear and/or creasing
Very Good 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, is acceptable
Good The record has been played so much that the sound quality has noticeably deteriorated, perhaps with some distortion and mild scratches. The cover and contents suffer from folding, scuffing of edges, spine splits, discolouration etc
Fair The record is still just playable but has not been cared for properly and displays considerable surface noise, it may even jump. The cover and contents will be torn, stained and/or defaced
Poor 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 The record is unplayable or might even be broken, and is only of use as a collection-filler