rostasi Posted Monday at 05:16 PM Posted Monday at 05:16 PM Got an email saying these were freshly dropped jazz titles, so you may be interested. HERE Quote
Rooster_Ties Posted Monday at 07:43 PM Posted Monday at 07:43 PM https://www.discogs.com/digs/features/a-jazz-archive-comes-to-discogs A Pittsburgh Collector’s 70,000-Record Jazz Archive Comes to Discogs George spent decades building a 70,000-record jazz archive, and now it’s up for grabs. If you spent any time sifting through records around Pittsburgh in the last several decades, you likely brushed shoulders with George, a quiet fixture of the western Pennsylvania scene. Inside his home, he lived a modest life as a family man with a career, taking the bus everywhere rather than the car, but behind closed doors he curated a 70,000-record archive. George was primarily a jazz collector. During the 1970s and ’80s, when the genre’s popularity waned and Blue Note, Prestige, Strata-East, and Impulse! Records were relegated to the bargain bin, George thrived. He hunted mint copies with relentless dedication, stacking them in his listening room over decades. In his later years… (…continues at link up above, with a few pictures too!) Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted Monday at 09:37 PM Posted Monday at 09:37 PM I don't get how they can list a sealed record with absolute certainty of what is inside of the shrinkwrap. There are a couple of sealed Blue Note records with cut corners and the release page lists particulars you could not know unless the record was opened. Quote
Brad Posted 22 hours ago Posted 22 hours ago 18 hours ago, Kevin Bresnahan said: I don't get how they can list a sealed record with absolute certainty of what is inside of the shrinkwrap. There are a couple of sealed Blue Note records with cut corners and the release page lists particulars you could not know unless the record was opened. Whenever I sell or buy a sealed record (from someone other than the manufacturer), the record is described as presumed mint. You can never know for sure obviously. Quote
B. Clugston Posted 21 hours ago Posted 21 hours ago "Sealed Mint Blue Note" = UA blue/white b label, warped vinyl. Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago I get that a sealed vintage record is an unknown LP. I also get that discogs doesn't allow you to post a record for sale unless you link it to one of the LPs released. But when the LP is listed with specifics like Van Gelder in the dead wax, then it's just not right. For instance, they're selling this: https://www.discogs.com/shop/item/4135184193 Clicking the "View Release" button brings you to an LP described as having: Matrix / Runout (Side A runout): BST-84058-A LW RVG STEREO Matrix / Runout (Side B runout): BST-84058-B · LW RVG STEREO If this were the actual record inside that sealed jacket, it would be a good deal at $90. But when you open and find that it's not a Van Gelder cut, can you return it? Unlikely. Stereo Jack's used to sell vintage sealed records for pretty cheap for this reason. I bought quite a few of them over the years and I never lucked into a Van Gelder Blue Note LP. It's like buying sealed packs of baseball cards and hoping it contains a rare card. Quote
Brad Posted 19 hours ago Posted 19 hours ago They’re probably going by another record. I imagine that’s pretty common info. Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted 18 hours ago Posted 18 hours ago It doesn't really matter at this point as most of the LPs I was talking about have already been bought, so some thought it was worth the gamble. Quote
Pim Posted 57 minutes ago Posted 57 minutes ago 21 hours ago, Brad said: Whenever I sell or buy a sealed record (from someone other than the manufacturer), the record is described as presumed mint. You can never know for sure obviously. Yeah I bought a Inner City pressing of Monnette Sudler’s Time for a Change on a fair last year that was sealed. Never gonna do it again. Multiple scratches and even worse audible defects. Quote
Brad Posted 47 minutes ago Posted 47 minutes ago 7 minutes ago, Pim said: Yeah I bought an Inner City pressing of Monnette Sudler’s Time for a Change on a fair last year that was sealed. Never gonna do it again. Multiple scratches and even worse audible defects. Sounds like a Xanadu Barry Harris I purchased a few years ago. Horrible. I was going to toss it but never did. I recently purchased a Vevor ultrasonic cleaning machine so I may see if that improves the sound at all. Quote
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