V-DISC VDISC 735 78 RPM LP ERROL GARNER LAURA LENNIE TRISTANO NIGHT IN TUNISIA

Sold Date: December 2, 2014
Start Date: November 25, 2014
Final Price: $19.95 (USD)
Bid Count: 1
Seller Feedback: 2446
Buyer Feedback: 357




NO 735

V-DISC    VDISC 


ERROL GARNER
 
 LAURA
 
YESTERDAYS



XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

 LENNIE TRISTANO

I CAN'T GET STARTED
 
 NIGHT IN TUNISIA



 
 78 RPM


 

LP: NM- TO VG++++    beautiful glossy   /   A FEW VERY TINY SLEEVE MARKS

SPECTACULAR

COVER:  ORIGINAL PAPER SLEEVE



I WASHED EACH DISC, OPTICALLY GRADING AND EVALUATING AS BEST AS POSSIBLE. 

I HAVE MANY V-DISC DISC AUCTIONS SO CHECK THE OTHERS FOR SOMETHING YOU MAY LIKE.

SOME ARE BOUND TO BE THE PRIDE OF A COLLECTION, WHILE OTHERS ARE FILLER FOR WHEN YOU FIND THAT PERFECT DISC.

I HAVE ATTEMPTED TO PUT SOME PHOTOS WHICH ALLOW SOME IDEAS OF CONDITION

 PLEASE DO NOT HESITATE TO ASK ANY ADDITIONAL QUESTIONS



V-discs Boosted Troop Morale During World War II

Most of them were away from home for the first time, they were young, and they were scared to death.

The Army drafted young men from every nook and cranny of the country and turned them into soldiers during World War II. They were put on ships and sent across the oceans to face life-and-death situations in lands they had previously only read about in their geography text books.

Though the daily rigors of Army life didn't lend much sympathy to their plight, the armed services did attempt to keep spirits and morale up. One such attempt was the V-Disc program.

V-Discs were the brainchild of Capt. Howard Bronson of the Army's Recreation and Welfare Section. Bronson was a musician and thought regular shipments of recorded music would boost troop morale.

At the time, the American Federation of Musicians was on strike in a dispute with recording companies over royalties. Because of the strike, there was no new recorded music being produced.

Lt. George Robert Vincent, a technical officer with the Armed Forces Radio Service, perceived that the ultimate morale booster would be newly recorded music, which was unavailable through traditional commercial channels because of the strike. So he received permission from Bronson to proceed with the project.

The American Federation of Musicians agreed to volunteer its members' services in making the recordings.

"There were some conditions, though," said Chuck Miller, a contributor to Goldmine magazine for music collectors. "Because of the strike, the union asked that the recordings not be used for any commercial purposes, that the records not be sold, and that all V-Discs were to be destroyed after the war."

About every major musical star of the time performed for V-Disc recordings: Frank Sinatra, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Spike Jones, Glenn Miller, Benny Goodman, Woody Herman, Count Basie, Ella Fitzgerald, and many others.

The recordings provide an interesting snapshot of popular music at the time. The sessions were oftentimes informal, and the performers sometimes experimented.

The Tommy Dorsey and Jimmy Dorsey bands made a rare recording together for a V-Disc. Fats Waller's last recording was on a V-Disc.

"Because of the musicians' strike," said Tim Neely, market analyst for Goldmine and its series of record price-guide books, "V-Discs are the only documentation of what these people sounded like during this period."

Every month during the war, according to Miller, a V-Disc kit of 30 records was sent from the RCA plant in Camden, N.J., to ports of call and bases around the European and Pacific theaters of operations. The kit also included an assortment of steel needles for the phonograph, a set of lyric sheets, and a questionnaire asking the soldiers what they wanted to hear in the future.

The most requested song was "White Christmas" by Bing Crosby. Among non-holiday music, "Stardust" was popular. V-Discs subsequently provided versions by Artie Shaw, Glenn Miller, Marie Greene, Edgar Haynes, and the song's writer, Hoagy Carmichael.

The final V-Disc kits were shipped in May 1949.

"After the V-Disc program ended," Miller said, "the armed services set out to honor the original AFM request that the records not be used for commercial purposes. Original masters and stampers were destroyed. Leftover V-Discs at bases and on ships were discarded.

"On some occasions, the FBI and the Provost Marshal's Office confiscated and destroyed V-Discs that servicemen had smuggled home. An employee at a Los Angeles record company even did some jail time for the illegal possession of more than 2,500 V-Discs."

Eventually, though, cooler heads prevailed and the V-Disc purge ended. As a result, a few V-Discs are available on the collectible record market today.



Label:   WAR DEPT / SPECIAL SERVICES DIVISION / ARMY SERVICE

Catalog#:  735 A & B    Format:  VINYL    Country:  USA       Released:  1940S


 

CHECK PHOTOS  


 

33 1/3  RPM

PLEASE READ

I  want to sell the very best LPs .

I do not want to sell LPs that have been played many times and created detrimental additional sound from playing

 

LPs vary in quality by the ingredients used in the LP, by the pressing,

 and by the use after opening.

Check the description for each LP for flaws and pressing quality.


XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX

Condition Notes:

Records are graded on visual and play inspection. Each LP is washed on a VPI HW 17, an expensive and careful machine.  This cleans and exposes each LP, removing all dust, fingerprints, and chemicals used in the stamping process. This allows a proper visual inspection, and a bad pressing is readily seen. If a bad pressing is noticed, the slightly flattened spots are now seen. All the sleeve marks and scratches are exposed.  I try and comment on the pressing. Some are just noisy.  There can be pressing marks which are a bit swirly, which do not seem to affect the sound at all. If I can I will note these. The marks from either are very different.  I will only sell the best I can, and expose each item by the washing process.  This wash is even recommended before the first play, to clean the residue of pressing. After cleaning each LP is inspected. If a particular item is noticed, I will play at that spot and report if there is an issue. Realize the difference between the qualities of different manufacturers. Different companies had different tolerances to quality.  There was variance of each pressing plant within each company at times. Sometimes it may be worth owning a very nice LP (minty as far as played) that is not a great pressing, as they for the most part, all the pressings had issues because of conditions. Perhaps they used an inferior product for the LP itself, which made it difficult to produce a great product. The Japanese LPs sound better for a reason. They put more money in the product of the record material and in the care of the quality during the pressing process. They might use each stamper for far fewer LPs. I do not want to sell anything that has been played many times and created any additional sound from these playings. If that is the case it will be because of a rare recording and identified as such.


XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX



Sealed: A brand new, SEALED record, never played


 Mint: An unsealed record that looks as good as new.

A nearly perfect record. The record should show no signs of wear. An LP cover should have no creases, folds, seam splits, water stains or other similar defects. The same should be true of any inserts, such as posters, lyric sleeves and the like (or else these should be graded separately). Basically, an LP in near mint condition looks as if you just got it home from a record shop and opened it.


NM:  An LP that  may have some pressing marks and played a time or 2.



VG++: Excellent. Light cosmetic flaws that should not affect the sound.

A Very Good Plus Plus record will show some signs that it was played and otherwise handled by a previous owner who took good care of it. Record surfaces may show some signs of wear and may have slight scuffs or very light scratches that don't affect one's listening experiences. Slight warps that do not affect the sound are ""OK"", but should be clearly pointed out. The label may have some ring wear or discoloration, but it should be barely noticeable. The center hole will not have been misshapen by repeated play. An LP cover may have slight signs of wear also and may be marred by a cut-out hole, indentation, staple holes or corner cut. In general, if not for a couple things wrong with it, the VG+ graded item would be Near Mint. Very Good Plus Plus records are highly acceptable to all but a few collectors.

 VG+: May have cosmetic flaws, mild surface noise or short patches of ticking, but should sound fine overall.

Many of the slight defects found in a VG++ record will be more pronounced in a VG+ disc. Surface noise MAY be evident upon playing, especially in soft passages and during a song's intro and fade, but will not overpower the music otherwise. Groove wear MAY start to be noticeable, as will light scratches (deep enough to feel) that will affect the sound. Labels may be marred by writing, or have tape or stickers (or their residue). The same will be true of picture sleeves or LP covers. However, a VG item DOES NOT have all of these problems at the same time, only two or three of them.


VG: May have moderate noise throughout or one or two bad patches from scratches. Still fine for general listening.

 Very Good does not mean Bad! A record in Very Good or Good Plus condition can be put onto a turntable and will play through without skipping. But it will have significant surface noise and scratches and visible groove wear. A cover or sleeve will have seam splits, especially at the bottom or on the spine. Tape, writing, ring wear or other defects will start to overwhelm the object.


Good: Noisy, but plays through. I will only sell very rare or unusual items in this condition.
Please contact me for a refund if a record plays worse than described.

 

If you buy more than 1 item, you will get the most accurate shipping quote by contacting me for an invoice. In the U.S. I offer USPS Media Mail. Priority Mail

 

 

CHECK PHOTOS

If you buy more than 1 item, you will get the most accurate shipping quote by contacting me for an invoice. In the U.S. I offer USPS Media Mail. Priority Mail and Express Mail rates are available upon request; just contact me and ask for a revised invoice. Internationally I offer USPS First Class Airmail, Priority, Priority Flat Rate Box, and Express.

 Please note that First Class Airmail CANNOT BE TRACKED online. If you want international tracking, you must request either Priority or Express Mail shipping.

I will combine multiple orders to save postage.

 

Default shipping price displayed is for Media Mail in the U.S. and First Class Airmail internationally.

OVER $100 WILL SHIP PRIORITY

 

 

International Bidders Please Note...  Ebay's new required statement... • Import duties, taxes and charges are not included in the item price or shipping charges. These charges are the buyer’s responsibility. • Please check with your country’s customs office to determine what these additional costs will be prior to bidding/buying.”

 

 

I SHIP WITHIN 1 BUSINESS DAY.

 

INTERNATIONAL BUYERS PLEASE WRITE FOR SHIPPING COSTS

 

I WILL DO FEEDBACK WHEN MY BUYER DOES

                                                                          IF YOU HAVE AN ISSUE, PLEASE BRING IT TO OUR ATTENTION AND WE WILL MAKE IT RIGHT FOR OUR CUSTOMERS.

PAYPAL OR CONTACT ME IF ANOTHER TYPE OF PAYMENT IS DESIRED

 

Each time you buy or sell something, you have an opportunity to leave Feedback about your experience. That Feedback is an essential part of what makes eBay a successful community.

Feedback consists of a positive, negative, or neutral rating, along with a short comment. Buyers and sellers build reputations that are based on all the Feedback ratings and comments left by their trading partners.

This information is available in each member's Feedback Profile, and helps prospective trading partners buy and sell with confidence.

More fast facts about Feedback:

Along with an overall rating, buyers can also rate sellers on the details of the purchase. These are anonymous, and don't count toward the overall Feedback Score.
Since Feedback becomes a permanent part of your record, buyers are encouraged to contact sellers to try to resolve any issues before leaving neutral or negative Feedback.
Buyers can they've left for sellers in the case of a mistake.

Please note, if you bid on and win this auction, you are agreeing to all terms and conditions detailed in this listing.