Sold Date:
January 17, 2017
Start Date:
January 16, 2017
Final Price:
$550.00
$450.00
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
8
Buyer Feedback:
8
THIS IS THE COMPLETE SET!!! ALL IN A NICE WOODEN CASE. It has all the documentation and isn't missing a thing!!
Franklin Mint: "The Greatest Jazz Recordings Of All Time"
Back in the 70s when I was in junior high school, I subscribed to one of
the monthly record clubs. I can't remember which one it was -- Columbia
House, BMG, and RCA were all popular -- but their advertisements were
everywhere, promising deals like: "10 Albums For Only One Cent!" You did
indeed get 10 albums for a penny, but the catch was that you were
obliged to order another four or five albums at full price over the
course of the year.
In addition, each month you received a catalog announcing the "Selection
Of The Month." If you wanted the selection, you did nothing, and the
album would be shipped to you at full retail price plus shipping and
handling. If you didn't want the selection, you returned an attached
post card saying not to ship the album. Naturally, the clubs counted on a
lot of their subscribers forgetting to return the post card and paying
for the album. I was pretty diligent about returning the card and only
ordered the bare minimum required. I'm pretty sure I came out way ahead.
I still have a few old LPs in my collection (including a Led Zeppelin
IV cut by George Peckham) that have "Record Club" stickers on the
jackets.
One of the most enduring of the "subscription" mail order firms is the
Franklin Mint Society. Founded back in 1964, The Franklin Mint has sold
books, coins, dolls, plates, knives, and diecast classic cars by the
millions. From time to time, The Franklin Mint has also offered record
sets. Anyone who has spent time rummaging through used records in thrift
stores has surely come across sets from their 50-box collection of "The
100 Greatest Recordings Of All Time." Judging from the number of these
sets that I find, apparently every home in America had a subscription to
the series at one time or another. It may have been required by law.
For the casual listener, it wasn't a bad way to assemble a collection of
classical music's greatest hits. And since you can find the boxes today
for 25 cents or a dollar, they're still a good deal. As a bonus, they
are usually in very good condition since people liked the idea of owning a collection of classical music, but no one ever actually played them.
A few months ago at an estate sale, I found a collection of Franklin
Mint albums entitled: "The Greatest Jazz Recordings Of All Time." There
were 25 handsome box sets, with gold lettering on the covers and leather
bindings. Each box contained four LPs, pressed on 160-gram, dark red
vinyl, for a total of 100 albums. Many of the sets covered a stylistic
theme or time period, such as "Great Jazz Inventors -- Davis, Mingus,
Monk" or "Cool Jazz-Third Stream -- Baker, Getz, Brubeck, Mulligan,
Konitz, MJQ." The red vinyl was stunning, and every disk I examined
looked absolutely mint. They were priced at $12 per set, so I decided to
grab five and see if they were any good. I thought I could come back
the next day and get the rest if they turned out to be interesting.
Once I got them home and started to do a little research on the
Interwebs, I discovered that these sets are quite collectible and much
appreciated by jazz fans -- not only for the quality of the pressings,
but for the extremely well-done selection of tracks and artists. The
collection was curated over a period of several years (1983-85) by the
noted jazz critic and music scholar Dan Morgenstern. At the time,
Morgenstern was the director of Rutgers University at Newark's Institute
of Jazz Studies, one of the world's greatest collections of jazz
recordings, memorabilia, and other cool jazz-related stuff.
Morgenstern raided the Institute's collection for rare 78s and other
obscure recordings that in some cases have been out of print for
decades, Of course, he also includes selections from dozens of seminal
albums by jazz greats from Louis Armstrong to Pat Metheny. In all, there
are some 1,200 tracks on the 100 albums.
In
general, I'm not a fan of collections of any kind of music. As a rule I
never buy greatest hits collections by rock or jazz artists. If I like
an artist, then I want to have the individual albums so I can appreciate
the work as a whole and in context. But in the case of some jazz
pioneers or obscure artists from the 40s and 50s, it's not practical or
even possible to track down their recordings. So these Franklin Mint
sets are a great find. And even though I have many of the individual
tracks on the original albums, Morgenstern does a great job of selecting
cuts that highlight the development of a particular instrument or style
of jazz. In the case of one of the sets I bought (Volume 16) "Cool Jazz
- Third Stream," it's fascinating to hear tracks by artists I've never
heard of (Cy Touff, Andre Hodeir, Lennie Niehaus - anyone? anyone?)
alongside cuts by Miles Davis, Lee Konitz, Gerry Mulligan, and others
who came to define the Cool Jazz genre.
Each box set comes with a 20-page glossy booklet by Morgenstern or
another noted jazz writer, providing historical context and giving a
track-by-track discussion of the music. After spinning a few of the
albums, I rushed back over to the estate sale to pick up the rest of the
boxes. Naturally they were gone. But I've been able to pick up more
online, and now have 20 out of the 25 boxes.
Enjoy the music!