Sold Date:
March 27, 2022
Start Date:
March 17, 2022
Final Price:
$324.00
(USD)
Bid Count:
28
Seller Feedback:
1778
Buyer Feedback:
0
* RL SS/SS LH LED ZEPPELIN II ROBERT LUDWIG HOT MIX INSANELY RARE~BEAUTIFUL VG+
RL SS on side one, SS LH on side two with small runout dead wax are.
VG+ No Skips. Very little almost no Hiss Crackle or Pop. In the low volume areas you can hear some but not when the music is playing.
Album Cover is VG++
VG+ Very 1st Original Inner Sleeve with comedian Flip Wilson’s “Cowboys and Cool People” album in the upper right corner.
Disk will be packed outside the cover (to prevent seam splits during shipping) in a MoFi Mobile Sound Archival Quality - Anti Static - Non Scratching sleeve inside a thick polyurethane cover. Priority Shipping.
Label:
ST-A-691671CTH
Label:Atlantic – SD 8236
Format:Vinyl, LP, Album, Stereo, RL/LH Cuts, Gatefold
Country:US
Released:1969
Genre:Rock
Style:Hard Roc
* Lacquer Cut at – Sterling Sound
* Mastered At – Customatrix
* Pressed By – Columbia Records Pressing Plant, Terre Haute
* Manufactured By – Atlantic Recording Corporation
* Copyright © – Atlantic Recording Corporation
* Published By – Superhype Music, Inc.
* Rights Society: ASCAP
* Pressing Plant ID (Columbia Terre Haute, on labels): CTH
* Matrix / Runout (A side bottom label): ST-A-691671CTH
Additional Information:
Tracklist
A1 Whole Lotta Love 5:33
A2 What Is And What Should Never Be 4:47
A3 The Lemon Song 6:20
A4 Thank You 3:50
B1 Heartbreaker 4:15
B2 Living Loving Maid (She's Just A Woman) 2:40
B3 Ramble On 4:35
B4 Moby Dick 4:25
B5 Bring It On Home 4:1
Recent letter from Robert Ludwig about the rare original Hot Mix of Led Zeppelin.
I wrote Robert Ludwig in the last week and he wrote me back. All the versions from sterling are the same hot mix. The subtle variances between them are all simply from the slight differences in making a hand-made analog lacquer disc, at least one of which was sent to all the pressing plants at the time. The CTH plant got a lacquer that was half RL and half LH (Lee Hulko, his partner) but was of the SAME MIX AND MASTER, based on RL's notes. THEY ARE ALL THE SAME, aside from subtle variances and should be valued the SAME no matter who's initials are in the dead wax. They are all the same master from STERLING SOUND! Here is my reply from Robert Ludwig. Let this be the final word in this debate. Thanks!
Hi Jim,
I'm surprised about Lee Hulko's initials being on some of the parts. In all these years I had never come across any copies with his initials before.
When there were big orders of certain titles and there wasn't physically enough time for one person to crank out the lacquers as fast as the record company wanted, sometimes we would help each other out.
For instance, my initials might appear on a Beatles record that Lee mastered.
In every case, compared to now, those titles were relatively easy to master. Once one of us mastered an album and it was approved, we made careful notes, either one of us could cut it and it should come out the same. Back then, Lee and I shared the one room and worked different hours so it is possible one of the plants blew a part and needed a replacement right then with no delay.
So after I mastered the album (which Eddie Kramer & Atlantic approved) it was shipped to all the radio stations and the initial pressing was all from me and Sterling Sound.
Amhet Ertegun at Atlantic heard the album (which Eddie demanded be as hot as possible) and apparently it skipped on his daughters little turntable. Instead of calling us at Sterling and asking us to lower the level a little and telling us where it skipped, they had the disk cutters at Atlantic use my EQ'd cassette file copy and they cut it WAY lower than my original cut plus, in my opinion, it sounded dull and generally not very good sounding in comparison.
So all the disks that were played at the radio stations and all the initial pressings world wide came from me (and apparently Lee cut a part or two) and that was what "sold" the record and made it a hit. A year later, whenever I visited someone I would look at their Zeppelin II album to see if it was my cut or Atlantic's cut. It was easy to see by eye, the Atlantic cut ended much farther from the label and the grooves to the naked eye looked very conservative.
I still got to Master "Houses of the Holy" later on, no skipping problems with that as far as I know!
I hope this clears this up for you.
All my best,
Bob Ludwig
Gateway Mastering Studios Inc