Grateful Dead PROMO Sugar Magnolia / Mr. Charlie 1972 Warner Bros. WB 7667 VG

Sold Date: November 6, 2020
Start Date: October 30, 2020
Final Price: $21.50 (USD)
Bid Count: 6
Seller Feedback: 880
Buyer Feedback: 0


Shipped Media Mail in collector plastic cover. Tax by Ebay. 
From a collector's vault, bought as an investment no doubt, the Grateful Dead. Can't believe the R&B collector could appreciate it. Frequent low crackle and occasional pops, although it looks super clean, unscuffed unscratched (??).  Great label. Runout # is WB-7667 QAA-5607-S 1B Then little circular logo with two chopsticks coming out about 50 degrees apart coming out of bottom of circle.
P.S: Dead Heads out there - If anybody knows what this music has to do with the dead that are pictured everywhere on this and their other stuff or can even, briefly explain what the Grateful Dead were trying to say in their music, let me know. I'm clueless. I just hear a kind of cheerful modern folk music.
Hold payment for multiple records till invoice. 
Please understand that the records I am selling were not collected by me so I do not know their history. I am no kind of expert in music or records. I research each item on Discogs and Fosman's Dead Wax book for all the information in the post. If I have information from Discogs, Fosman or another seller's post that a record like mine is a reissue, I indicate that. I listen to all 45rpm records and parts of any 33rpm that looks potentially damaged. I judge them according to Discogs standards and give the reasons for my rating so buyers can second guess me. My quality ratings are not certified in any way. If the difference between an original edition and a reissue is indicated by a tiny detail not shown on Discogs, Fosman or by another seller, I may not discover that. I sell in the belief that collectors of vintage records are more knowledgeable than me about what they collect and know what they are looking at. I am glad to answer any questions. Because collectors may know the true value of a record, while I do not, I start at a very reasonable price and let bidders set the true value, which is often much higher than I thought or much lower. If an item gets no bids after a while I discard it even though I originally thought it was worth something.