The Beatles: Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, First Pressing vinyl LP, VGC

Sold Date: November 8, 2020
Start Date: October 29, 2020
Final Price: £67.89 (GBP)
Bid Count: 19
Seller Feedback: 1158
Buyer Feedback: 17


Offered for Auction with NO RESERVE
The Beatles classic 1967 Vinyl LP - Sgt Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band
FIRST PRESSING
Inner and Outer Sleeve and the LP are all in good condition.    They have been carefully kept by the original purchaser since being bought in 1967.    From a smoke and pet free home.
Released on Parlophone (PMC 7027).   A classic LP, which should be in everyone's record collection.    This is your chance to bid on a great condition, First Pressing copy of this best selling Beatles LP.
UK First Editions had:  A Garrod & Lofthouse laminated gatefold cover 
A 'cut-outs' card insert (full-color, single-sided. Printed signatures of Blake/Haworth at foot);
A black and yellow logo label with silver text:
"The Gramophone Co." in the radial text and "Sold in the U.K. Subject To Resale Price Conditions, See Price Lists" across label at center, with "Made in Gt. Britain" at foot.  This copy has all those features, proving it is a genuine First Edition Issue.
I am selling a number of classic 1960's, 70's and 80's LPs - please see my other auctions for details (happy to combine postage - upto 3 LP's for the price of 1 postage - UK only).   Records are posted in strong record mailers via Post Office recorded delivery.
Tracklist TaxmanEleanor RigbyI'm Only SleepingLove You ToHere, There And EverywhereYellow SubmarineShe Said She SaidGood Day SunshineAnd Your Bird Can SingFor No OneDr. RobertI Want To Tell YouGot To Get You Into My LifeTomorrow Never Knows
Revolver is the seventh studio album by the English rock band the Beatles. Released on 5 August 1966, it was the Beatles' final recording project before their retirement as live performers, and marked a progression on their 1965 release Rubber Soul in terms of the group's readiness to experiment in the recording studio. The album's diverse sounds include tape loops and backwards recordings on the psychedelic "Tomorrow Never Knows", a classical string octet on "Eleanor Rigby", and Indian-music backing on "Love You To". The album was reduced to eleven songs by Capitol Records in North America, where three of its tracks instead appeared on the June 1966 release Yesterday and Today.

The Beatles recorded the album following a three-month break from professional commitments at the start of 1966, and during a period when London was feted as the era's cultural capital. The songs reflect the influence of psychedelic drugs such as LSD and the increasing sophistication of the Beatles' lyrics to address themes including death and transcendence from material concerns. With no thoughts of reproducing their new material in concert, the band made liberal use of studio techniques such as varispeeding, reversed tapes, close audio miking and automatic double tracking (ADT), in addition to employing musical instrumentation outside of their standard live set-up. Some of the changes in studio practice introduced by Revolver, particularly ADT, were soon adopted throughout the recording industry.