RAMONES Mondo Bizarro RADIO ACTIVE 1992 punk Joey Johnny C.J. Marky Censorshit

Sold Date: July 5, 2015
Start Date: June 28, 2015
Final Price: $26.00 (USD)
Bid Count: 13
Seller Feedback: 647
Buyer Feedback: 43


The Ramones - Mondo Bizarro (Radio Active RAR 10615), 1992.
The Ramones speak out against Tipper Gore's Parents Music Research Center, the lobby interest that successfully persuaded Congress to apply warning labels to certain records deemed too sensitive for young ears.  The song "Censorshit" speaks directly to the issue and name checks Frank Zappa and Ozzy Osbourne, fellow freedom-of-speech and anti-censorship campaigners.
This is the first Ramones LP recorded after the departure of Dee Dee Ramone, replaced herein by C.J. Ramone (C.J. Ward).
Anti-censorship sticker and hype sticker affixed to front cover.  Rear cover has gold-ink 'promo only' imprint.  Stock label.
Condition:  Record is VG+; cover is VG+.  Bent corner.  
All records are visually graded unless stated otherwise.   Extremely conservative (and ACCURATE) grading.  
****    SEE GRADING GUIDELINES BELOW     ****
Packaged in professional heavy cardboard mailers.  Records are removed from covers for shipping; cardboard inserts are provided for extra protection.
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GRADING GUIDELINES:
Mint (M)   Absolutely perfect in every way.  Appears to have never been played, possibly even still sealed.
Near Mint (NM or M-)   A nearly perfect record showing no obvious signs of wear. A 45 RPM or EP sleeve should have no more than the most minor defects, such as almost invisible ring wear or other signs of slight handling. 
An LP cover should have no creases, folds, seam splits or other noticeable similar defects.  Basically, an LP in near mint condition looks as if you just got it home from a new record store and removed the shrink wrap. 
Very Good Plus (VG+)   A Very Good 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". 
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. 
Picture sleeves and LP inner sleeves will have some slight wear, lightly turned up corners, or a minor, slight seam split. An LP cover may have slight signs of wear also and may be marred by a cut-out hole, saw-cut, cut corner, grommet hole or another sign indicating that this may have been a remaindered album.
Very Good (VG)   On the disc, groove wear will start to be noticeable, as with light scratches (deep enough to feel with a fingernail) that will affect the sound. 
Labels may be marred by writing, or have tape or stickers (or their residue) attached. The same will be true of picture sleeves or LP covers. However, it will not have all of these problems at the same time, only two or three of them.  Records with an abundance of these defects are considered Very Good Minus (VG-).
Good (G)   A record in Good 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 (on a styrene record, the groove will be starting to turn white). 
A cover or sleeve may have major seam splits, tape, writing, fading, stains, major ring wear, foxing, storage grime or other such defects. 
Poor (P)   The record may be badly warped or scratched to the point that it won't play through without skipping or repeating. The picture sleeve is water damaged, split on all three seams and heavily marred by wear and writing. The LP cover has severe wear and damage to its integrity.