Sold Date:
March 9, 2019
Start Date:
March 2, 2019
Final Price:
$15.00
(USD)
Bid Count:
6
Seller Feedback:
351
Buyer Feedback:
16
Prince and the Revolution-Purple Rain-1984 Warner LP-26116-1 VG+/VG+
Cover: VG+
Record: VG+
Combined Shipping Discount- If you are buying more than one album, I do offer a combined discount which is as follows: $4.50 for the first album and $2 each for all subsequent albums purchased on the same day. To make this work on buy it now items just add the albums to your cart. I will then send an invoice for the amount of the items and discounted shipping. For auction items, just complete your bids and win the items and I will send an invoice. Please pay promptly after an invoice is sent, I appreciate it!
Selling my entire collection of over 300 albums over the next weeks, months. Mostly 1970-1980s Rock, Punk, Alternative, New Wave, Fusion, Jazz, and a smattering of classical.
All my vinyl has been played on very good turntables and cartridges over the years. Brands included Dual, Thorens and Kenwood with Shure, Ortofon, Empire, and AudioQuest cartridges. Over the years they have been cleaned with Discwasher or Last cleaner. All albums with a Last Sticker on the label have been preserved with the Last Factory Vinyl Preservative.
Used vinyl records may have the occasional snap, crackle, or tic it is the nature of the media, regardless of rating. Also all used vinyl can never be perfectly flat. While these are characteristics are inherent to the media, please understand all vinyl I sell is visually graded using the Goldmine standards shown below. Also note that liner sleeves may have small seam splits on one or more sides due to the course of normal handling. These will not be noted in the description. Please note records have been stored and would benefit from a cleaning prior to play, but you knew that, right.
NM records are shiny, with no visible defects. Writing, stickers or other markings cannot appear on the label, nor can any spindle marks from someone trying to blindly put the record on the turntable. Major factory defects also must be absent; a record and label obviously pressed off center is not Near Mint. If played, it will do so with no surface noise. (NM records don't have to be never played; a record used on an excellent turntable can remain NM after many plays if the disc is properly cared for.)
NM covers are free of creases, ring wear and seam splits of any kind.
VG+ records may show some slight signs of wear, including light scuffs or very light scratches that do not affect the listening experience. Slight warps that do not affect the sound are OK. Minor signs of handling are OK, too, such as telltale marks around the center hole, but repeated playing has not misshapen the hole. There may be some very light ring wear or discoloration, but it should be barely noticeable.
VG+ covers should have only minor wear. A VG+ cover might have some very minor seam wear or a split (less than one inch long) at the bottom, the most vulnerable location. Also, a VG+ cover may have some defacing, such as a cut-out marking. Covers with cut-out markings can never be considered Near Mint.
VG records have more obvious flaws than their counterparts in better shape. They lack most of the original gloss found on factory-fresh records. Groove wear is evident on sight, as are light scratches deep enough to feel with a fingernail. When played, a VG record has surface noise, and some scratches may be audible, especially in soft passages and during a song's intro and ending. But the noise will not overpower the music otherwise.
VG covers will have many signs of human handling. Ring wear in the middle or along the edges of the cover where the edge of a record would reside, is obvious, though not overwhelming. Some more creases might be visible. Seam splitting will be more obvious; it may appear on all three sides, though it won't be obvious upon looking. Someone might have written or it or stamped a price tag on it, too.
Good (G),
Good Plus (G+)
or Very Good Minus
(VG-)
Good does not mean bad! The record still plays
through without skipping, so it can serve as filler until something
better comes along. But it has significant surface noise and groove
wear, and the label is worn, with significant ring wear, heavy
writing, or obvious damage caused by someone trying to remove tape or
stickers and failing miserably. A Good to VG cover has ring wear
to the point of distraction, has seam splits obvious on sight and may
have even heavier writing, such as, for example, huge radio station
letters written across the front to deter theft.