Sold Date:
July 28, 2024
Start Date:
June 18, 2021
Final Price:
$85.00
(USD)
Seller Feedback:
702
Buyer Feedback:
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**COVER GRADING: (NM)
Cover is in Brand New PERFECT condition!! We purchased this Album personally on Record Store Day 2021!! Please check All the pictures for further details on condition!! We include a polypropylene sleeve for the cover!!
**Details** (Notes from Discogs)
This is a Brand New Factory Sealed with 2 Hype Stickers Record Store Day 2021 (June 12 drop) Reissue, Limited Edition, Yellow Translucent Vinyl, LP, Album by Lady Gaga called "Chromatica".
Label for this album is Interscope Records - Streamline Records.
Release Number - B0033479-01
Barcode: 602435720128
*Limited to 11,000 Worldwide (8,000 copies allocated in the U.S.). Issued in an embossed trifold jacket!!
"Exclusive Trifold Vinyl Includes:
-Translucent Yellow Vinyl
-28 Page LP Booklet
-Collectable Zine
-Never Before Seen Gaga Images And Artwork
***SHIPPING:
''We use cardboard mailers, cardboard inserts, bubble wrap, polypropylene sleeves and tight packing to prevent the vinyl from moving to fully protect shipping!! We will provide insurance with this album!!
!!!!!!!!!!!Thanks for looking!!!!!!!!!!!
***Tracklist***
Side A:
A1: Chromatica I 1:00
A2: Alice 02:57
A3: Stupid Love 3:13
A4: Rain on Me ( with Ariana Grande) 3:02
A5: Free Woman 3:11
A6: Fun Tonight 2:53
A7: Chromatica II 0:41
A8: 911 2:52
Side B:
B1: Plastic Doll 3:41
B2: Sour Candy (with BlackPink) 2:37
B3: Enigma 2:59
B4:Replay 3:06
B5: Chromatica III 0:27
B6: Sine From Above (with Elton John) 4:04
B7: 1000 Doves 3:35
B8: Babylon 2:41
**About Us ( T.J. and Kristie):
*All records are carefully graded and pictured in an attempt to give customers the best accurate impression of condition (thereby letting you know what it "really" looks like)!!
*We are always on the hunt for a new find for our vinyl collection! It is our passion to collect and find vinyl records! The sound of your favorite band on vinyl is unmatched!
*Check our other listings and check back often! We have a broad range of genres and artists and we list regularly. If you have questions, ALWAYS feel free to Contact us!
"Chromatica" is the sixth studio album by American singer Lady Gaga. This album draws inspiration from 1990s house music, seeing Gaga adopt a cyberpunk-inspired persona.
Chromatica is a comeback album from an artist who has never gone away and never experienced a dip in popularity. Maybe Artpop provided a dent in her armor back in 2013, with none of its singles dominating the charts or conversation the way the hits from The Fame Monster and Born This Way did, but the album went to number one, as did her 2014 duet record with Tony Bennett, as did 2016's purported country-rock makeover Joanne, and the soundtrack to 2018's A Star Is Born, a smash that also earned her an Oscar for the ballad "Shallow." None of these stylistic excursions can be heard on Chromatica -- there isn't even a ballad that attempts to replicate the surging pathos of "Shallow" -- but they can be felt underneath the diamond-hard surface of this determined revival of Gaga's dance-pop roots. By dedicating the entirety of her sixth proper studio set to club music, she's effectively declaring that she's come in from the cold, but the old-school show biz moves that made her beloved of old-timers like Bennett and Hollywood alike can be heard by how she slyly finds cameo space for her spiritual godfather Elton John and Ariana Grande, the biggest star in dance-pop in 2020. Gaga stands proudly between these two poles, hipper than Elton John but sounding down-right old-fashioned when compared to Grande. Gaga leans into her status as a veteran on Chromatica, making only the mildest attempts to sound modern. She'd rather revive memories of The Fame Monster while evoking sounds that conjure memories of the '90s and Y2K. Since it's been so long since Gaga has been determined to deliver glitzy thrills, it might take a moment to realize that Chromatica is simultaneously a retreat from the contemporary pop charts and as personal a record as Joanne, which was touted as her singer/songwriter affair. Chromatica willfully ignores trap and the other dour pop trends of the late 2010s for exuberant disco and house, styles that are not only in her musical comfort zone but allow her the freedom to explore personal pain and loss, such as the cry for help of "911." The emotional urgency driving a good chunk of the songs means Chromatica doesn't feel stiff or fusty even if it rejects the present, and there's also a lot to be said for the show biz razzle-dazzle Gaga has absorbed in the years since Artpop. Maybe she's lost her appetite to be a weird provocateur, but she has learned how to sharpen and stylize her attack, and that focus makes Chromatica one of her most consistent and satisfying albums.