Beatles 45 Twist And Shout / There's A Place 1964 VG Rare Canada Capitol 72146

Sold Date: August 11, 2016
Start Date: August 4, 2016
Final Price: $57.00 (USD)
Bid Count: 11
Seller Feedback: 5768
Buyer Feedback: 21


-Artist / Group: Beatles

-Mini bio: Formed in Liverpool, England, in the late 1950's. Known in early forms as The Quarrymen, Johnny & The Moondogs, The Rainbows, and The Silver Beatles. Named The Beatles in 1960. Originally consisted of John Lennon (born on Oct. 9, 1940), Paul McCartney (born on June 18, 1942)  George Harrison (guitars; born on Feb. 24, 1943), Stu Sutcliffe (bass) and Pete Best (drums). Sutcliffe left in April 1961 (died of a brain hemorrhage on April 10, 1962); McCartney moved to bass. Best replaced by Ringo Starr (born on July 7, 1940) in August 1962. Group managed by Brian Epstein (died of a sleeping-pill overdose on Aug. 27, 1967) and produced by George Martin (born on Jan. 3, 1926). First U.S. tour in Feb. 1964. Won the 1964 Best New Artist Grammy Award. Group starred in the movies A Hard Day's Night (1964), Help (1965), Magical Mystery Tour (1967) and Let It Be (1970); contributed soundtrack to the annimated movie Yellow Submarine (1968). Formed their own Apple Record label in 1968. Paul McCartney publicly announced group's dissolution on April 10, 1970.

-Won the Grammy's Trustees Award in 1972.

-John Lennon was shot to death on Dec. 8, 1980 (age 40).

-George Harrison died of cancer on Nov. 29, 2001 (age 58).

-Group inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1988.

-On Nov. 19, 1995, ABC-TV began airing the three-night documentary, The Beatles Anthology, which featured two new Beatles recordings; Free As A Bird (original demo recording by John Lennon in 1977, with new vocals and instrumentation added by the other Beatles) and Real Love (original demo recorded by John Lennon in 1979, with new vocals and instrumentation added by the other Beatles).

-Side one: Twist And Shout

-Released in the USA on Tollie 9001

-Side two: There's A Place

-Released in the USA on Tollie 9001

-Label: Capitol 72146

-Hand written matrix numbers are CT-1-72146-4 and CC2-72146-4

-Year released: 1964

-Billboard number: 2 and 74 respectively (Tollie 9001)

-Billboard debut: March 14th and April 11, 1964 respectively (Tollie 9001)

-Pressed in: Canada

-Visual grade: VG

-Note: Although visually a VG due to many light surface scratches and scuffs, both sides of the record play with excellent fidelity, no distortion, no skips and while there is a bit of background noise at the lead-in, once the needle hits the grooves and the music starts, the background noise pretty much disappears.

-Side one Label: VG to VG+ with minor label wear, no writing or stickers. 

-Side two label:  VG+ with less label wear than side one label with no writing or stickers.

-Regarding unique Canadian Beatle pressings: 

-There were nine Beatle singles released on Canadian Capitol which did not have an American Capitol Records equivalent, they were:

1.) Love Me Do b/w P.S. I Love You (Canadian Capitol 72076 released in Canada in mid February, 1963) which was the first Beatles' release anywhere on Capitol records and wouldn't be released in the U.S. until 1964 on Tollie 9008. Also, the Canadian pressing has Ringo Starr on drums whereas the U.S. pressed version on Tollie 9008 has session drummer Andy White on drums with Ringo Starr playing tambourine.

-According to Paul White, who served as Canada Capitols' marketing manager, the Canadian 45 rpm first pressings of Love Me Do on Capitol 72076 fared poorly and reportedly sold 88 of the 170 copies manufactured.

-According to Rockin' Records 2011 edition, the Canadian first pressing can be easily identified by an inspection of the label; if under the Capitol logo there is printed Side A and Side B then you hold in your possession one of the rarest of all Beatles' singles; this is the ultra rare Take 1 of Love Me Do with Ringo Starr on drums.

-Subsequent (second pressing) Canadian Capitol 72076 pressings do NOT have Side A and Side B on the labels. For this track, Andy White plays drums on Love Me Do with Ringo Starr relegated to playing tambourine.

2.) Please, Please Me b/w Ask Me Why (Canadian Capitol 72090, released in Canada on April 9, 1963) which was released in the U.S. on Vee-Jay 581 in 1964 with From Me To You as the flip side. Once again Canada was not ready for The Beatles and according to Paul White, who served as Canada Capitols' marketing manager, Please, Please Me on Canadian Capitol 72090 sold about 180 copies.

-Ask Me Why was never released as a single in the USA but was released in 1964 as an EP on Tollie 1-903 as: Misery / Taste Of Honey / Ask Me Why / Anna.

3.) From Me To You b/w Thank You Girl (Canadian Capitol 72101, released in Canada on June 18,1963) which was released in the U.S. on Vee-Jay 581 in 1964 with Please, Please Me as the flip side. This time, sales were somewhat better, perhaps selling as many as 500 copies in Canada. Thank You Girl was released on Vee-Jay 587 in March, 1964 with Do You Want To Know A Secret as the flip side.

4.) She Loves You b/w I'll Get You (Canadian Capitol 72125 released in Canada in mid-September 1963) which was released in the U.S. on Swan 4152 in 1964 with the same 'A' and 'B' sides. Although She Loves You initially flopped in the U.S., in Canada She Loves You did much better. The single slowly worked its way up to the top of Toronto's CHUM hit parade, remaining on the charts for an impressive 22 weeks. According to Paul White, Canadian Capitol marketing manager; She Loves You landed in every major Canadian radio chart, becoming a huge seller, and taking the previous three releases along with it, so all four hit the charts.

5.) Roll Over Beethoven b/w Please Mister Postman (Canadian Capitol 72133 released in Canada on Dec. 9, 1963) which was imported into the U.S. fom Canada and was only available in the U.S. on the E.P. Four By The Beatles on American Capitol EAP 1-2121 from 1964. The unique Canadian record was charted by Toronto radio station CHUM for 16 weeks, peaking at #2. A few months later it charted in the U.S. as a Canadian imported single (Billboard #68, Cash Box #30 and Record World #35.)

6.) All My Loving b/w This Boy (Canadian Capitol 72144 from 1964) which was imported into the U.S. from Canada and was only available in the U.S. on the E.P. Four By The Beatles on American Capitol EAP 1-2121 from 1964. All My Loving was the last of the unique Canadian singles. The April 18, 1964, Cash Box reported that Capitol of Canada would no longer issue future Beatle releases that were not being made available simultaneously in the United States. Paul White, Canada Capitol marketing manager later confirmed that the label discontinued preparing special Canadian records after being ordered by its parent company president Alan Livingston (President of Capitol America) to conform all releases to U.S. records.

7.) Twist And Shout b/w There's A Place (Canadian Capitol 72146 from 1964) which was released in the U.S. on Tollie 9001 in 1964 with the same 'A' and 'B'sides.

8.) Do Want To Know A Secret b/w Thank You Girl (Canadian Capitol 72159 from 1964) which was released in the U.S. on Vee-Jay 587 with the same 'A' and 'B' sides in 1964.

9.) Sie Liebt Dich b/w I'll Get You (Canadian Capitol 72162 from 1964) which was only available in the U.S. on Swan 4182 from 1964 with the same 'A' and 'B' sides.

-All of the above are absolute must haves for the Collector of Beatles singles and especially for collector's of unique Canadian pressings.

-We stock a constantly changing inventory of 45's, 78's and LP's in every genre of music. The release dates range from the early 1900's through to the 2000's. Hundreds of titles are unplayed, new old stock. Buy with confidence, we grade records accurately and have been selling records through Ebay since 2000.

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-Buy in multiples and save on shipping

-Buyer pays shipping charges:

Canada- $4.00 for the first two 45's plus .50 for each additional 45 up to seven 45's

LP's and 78's- $10.00 for the first one plus $1.00 for each additional LP or 78 up to three records

U.S.A.- $4.00 for the first two 45's plus .75 for each additional 45 up to seven 45's

LP's and 78's- $10.00 for the first one plus $1.00 for each additional LP or 78 up to three records

International- $9.00 for the first two 45's plus $1.00 for each additional 45 up to seven 45's. Eight 45's to twelve is $30.00

LP's and 78's- $18.00 for the first one. Two to three is $30.00

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Record grading:

(M) Mint: A mint record should appear to have just left the manufacturers without any handling; that is, it should appear perfect! No light scuffs or scratches, blotches or stains on labels or writing, tears or splits; nothing. Perfect. And age has nothing to do with it; the same standards for Mint apply to a rare rockabilly single from 1955 as they do to a Top 40 record from 1988! There are no sliding values for Mint. A Mint record cover should appear to have never had a record in it; no ring-wear, dog-eared corners, writing, seam-splits; nothing! Perfect! Even a new, unplayed old stock record can have factory flaws. Mint should be used sparingly and will usually attract a premium value to serious collectors. Mint means perfect and nothing else!

(SS) Still sealed: Still sealed in the factory shrink wrap.

(M-) Mint minus: A nearly perfect record. The record will show no obvious signs of wear, very light surface scuffs from normal handling are permitted but no light scratches. Original finish intact. Picture sleeves should have no more than the most minor defects, such as almost invisible ring wear or other signs of slight handling.

(VG+) Very good plus: The record will show some signs that it was played or otherwise handled by a previous owner who took good care of it. Record surfaces may show some slight signs of wear and may have slight scuffs or light scratches. Picture sleeves may have some slight ring wear, lightly turned up corners, or a small seam split.

(VG) Very good: Many of the defects found in a VG+ record or sleeve will be more pronounced in a VG record or picture sleeve. Groove wear may be noticeable, the record may have light scratches (deep enough to feel with a fingernail) that will affect the sound, but the foreign noises will be less prominent than the music. Picture sleeves may have quite prominent ring wear. Creases, folds, seam splits and tears will be more obvious and may appear on all three sides, and there may be writing as well.

(VG-) Very good minus: Foreign noises may be about as prominent as the music. The record still plays through without skipping. The picture sleeve will have more significant seam splits, perhaps to the point where they were taped closed, and highly obvious ring wear and heavier writing. Can serve as a filler until a better one comes along.

(G) Good: We seldom offer a good record for sale unless it is particularily rare for the following reasons: Foreign noises are louder than the recorded music and listening can be distracted by the noise. May or may not play through without skipping, but should be so noted. Picture sleeves are so badly seam split that they may not be able to contain the record within.Tears, folds, writing and ring wear may be overwheming.