Furtwangler Menuhin Bartok Japanese Pressing Near Mint - Mint Never Played?
  $   28

 


$ 28 Sold For
Aug 4, 2016 Sold Date
Jun 23, 2016 Start Date
1 Number Of Bids
  USA Country Of Seller
eBay Sold at
 
save auction  

Description

<?xml:namespace prefix = "o" ns = "urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office" />

Bartok  Violin Concerto

Yehudi Menuhin / Violin

Wilhelm Furtwangler Conducting The Philharmonia Orchestra

 

 

 

Record Label 

Angel

 

After the first record, additional

 

Catalogue #   

AB 8037

 

records ship at $1.00 each

 

Release Date  

19

 

within the continental USA.

 

Side 1

Near Mint - Mint

 

 

 

Side 2             

Near Mint - Mint

 

Purchases of 3 or more

 

Jacket

Near Mint

 

records will receive a 10%

 

Sleeve

Original

 

discount

 

Test Played

No

 

 

 

 

 

 

All pictures are of the 

 

 

 

 

actual jacket / sleeve / label

     

Comments:

This is one of a number of albums that we acquired in a large collection of a physician who was also an amateur violinist. Normally we do not rate an opened album as mint, but in this case the album is pristine and may never have been played, or at most, once or twice. All information and liner notes are in Japanese.

 

The jacket is near mint.

 

 

 

International Buyers:

 

Do not ask us to change customs forms, we will not, period.

 

All international orders of $50 or more will be shipped priority mail, regardless of weight, no exceptions!

 If your order totals $50 or more, do not pay until you are invoiced and when you are invoiced do not

 e-mail us and ask to have the postage lowered, it will not be!!!!! Priority mail is priority mail!!!!!

We do not negotiate international postage. If it is priority mail, then it is priority mail and the buyer is responsible for all customs duties.

  What Stated Condition Means

 

Our condition ratings are done visually, thus if there is something we missed visually, or if there is something a visual inspection could not have foreseen, let us know and we will make it right. Please understand that visual does not mean sonically. A visually graded record is not play graded, it is graded based on the physical attributes.

 

There are times when we test play a record, if we do so we will note the results in the comments section. We also use the comment section when we feel there is need to call items to your attention. Please read all comments before bidding so you will have a full understanding of the condition of the record and any other information that we feel is important enough to put in writing.

 

Sealed:  Nothing to say, it is as it came from the manufacturer and we can make no comment since it has never been opened

 

Mint:  As perfect as you can get after it has been opened, but not absolutely perfect because the second you open a record it is no longer perfect.  Most mint records have been played sparingly, or played with great care on sophisticated systems and show no obvious signs of use, some appear never to have been played, but might nonetheless have a hint of surface noise hidden among the quieter passages

 

Near Mint:  No distracting flaws on the jacket, no scratches, nicks on the record surface. There can be some light scuffing from the sleeve but it will have no effect on the playing or the sound quality. There might be an occasional piece of background noise, but not consistent or frequent

 

Excellent:  Clean jacket with some wear, clean bright record surface with some light scratches or sleeve scuffs  that do not make their presence known during playing, some light surface noise.

 

Very Good:  A frequently played record. Surface will show signs of use that are much more obvious and in greater number than an excellent grade, such as very light scratches /hairlines and sleeve scuffing. The jacket will be fairly clean but will show signs of having been handled, though not roughly. There is more surface noise than on those graded excellent.

 

Good:  We limit the listing of records in this condition to only those that are rare enough to be desirable even if slightly abused. This is the same thing that happens in the world of stamps. Something rare may often not be available in the better grades, or might be priced to high for inclusion in a collection that has financial boundaries. Records in this condition will be listenable but will have enough surface wear to have that wear make inroads into the overall sound of the record. When a record is graded as good we do not accept returns




price rating