QUEEN : 1 sided ACETATE - FAT BOTTOMED GIRLS - alternate version - QUEEN
  £   515
  $   615

 


£ 515 Sold For
May 12, 2013 Sold Date
May 2, 2013 Start Date
£   150 Start price
12   Number Of Bids
  Netherlands Country Of Seller
eBay Auctioned at
 
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Description

QUEEN
1 sided ACETATE 

1 track FAT BOTTOMED GIRLS 7:19 min. 
This acetate features only 1 Queen song : Fat Bottomed Girls , the normal album version lasts for 4: 16 min. and the 7"single version clocks at 3:22 min.  
This version of FAT BOTTOMED GIRLS runs for 7:19 minutes ! 
Of course late 70's the Disco was a big thing. Famous for it's 12 inch single market , rockbands were trying to gain something from this market well. So I gues this is a experiment which was never commercially released by the band. Their first 12 inch single was a year later : Crazy Little Thing Called Love (germany only)


LABEL : EMI YEAR - 1978 Condition : VGSIZE : 12 inch




Acetate disc

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An acetate disc, also known as a test acetate, dubplate (a term from Jamaican reggae culture, now also applied to individually recorded discs of solid plastic), lacquer (a technically correct term preferred by engineers in the recording industry), transcription disc (a special recording intended for, or made from, a radio broadcast) or instantaneous disc (because it can be played immediately after recording without any further processing), is a type of gramophone record, a mechanical sound storage medium, widely used from the 1930s to the late 1950s for recording and broadcast purposes and still in limited use today.

Unlike ordinary vinyl records, which are quickly formed from lumps of plastic by a mass-production molding process, a so-called acetate disc is created by using a recording lathe to cut a sound-modulated groove into the surface of a special lacquer-coated blank disc, a real-time operation requiring expensive, delicate equipment and expert skill for good results. They are made for special purposes, almost never for sale to the general public. They can be played on any normal phonograph but will be degraded by wear much more quickly than vinyl. Some acetates are highly prized for their rarity, especially when they contain unpublished material.

Acetates are typically produced by dubbing from a master tape recording. By electroplating the acetate master, stampers (special moulds) can be created, which in turn are used to press large quantities of regular vinyl records. Acetates are also used for testing the quality of the tape-to-disc transfer. Historically, they were also a favored medium for use in comparing different takes or mixes, and for getting preview copies of impending new releases into the hands of important disc jockeys.

Material and packaging

Despite their name, most acetate discs do not contain any acetate. Instead, most are an aluminum disc with a coating of nitrocellulose lacquer. (Glass was also used for the substrate during World War II, when aluminum was in short supply.[1][3]) This production process results in a disc that is different in many ways from the vinyl records sold to customers at retail. Whereas vinyl records are light and semi-flexible, acetates are rigid and somewhat heavier. More significantly, the thin coating of lacquer on an acetate is much more susceptible to wear; the playback head of a stylus quickly damages the grooves of the record such that after only a relatively few number of plays the audio quality is noticeably degraded.[2] This is not necessarily a problem, however, since acetates are meant primarily for test recordings. Collectors, of course, may find themselves wishing for greater durability.

Acetates typically come in two sizes: 10" discs for singles and 12" discs for albums. The record's sleeve is typically nothing more than a generic cover from the manufacturing company and the disc's label is similarly plain, containing only basic information about the content (title, artist, playing time, etc.), which is usually typed but is often just hand-written.[2]

[edit]Value

Due to their rarity, some acetates can command high prices at auction. Brian Epstein's collection of Beatles acetates fetched between $1,000 and $10,000 per disc.[4][5] An acetate from The Velvet Underground, containing music that would later appear on their first album, The Velvet Underground & Nico, sold on eBay in 2006 for $25,200.[6] An acetate of Elvis Presleys' That All Right recently sold for $82,393.60.[7]








I am selling spares and doubles of my collection to make room for new Queen stuff.

TAKE A LOOK AT MY OTHER QUEEN AUCTIONS

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