Rare Jerome Richardson Hank Jones New Jazz LP DG Mono
  $   136

 


$ 136 Sold For
Feb 28, 2008 Sold Date
Feb 21, 2008 Start Date
$   10 Start price
7   Number Of Bids
  USA Country Of Seller
eBay Auctioned at
 
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Description

NICE COPY OF THIS HARD TO FIND 'NEW JAZZ' RARITY! JEROME RICHARDSON SEXTET "Midnight Oil" LP WITH HANK JONES (PIANO), KENNY BURRELL (GUITAR), JOE BENJAMIN (BASS), JIMMY CLEVLAND (TROMBONE), AND CHARLIE PERSIP (DRUMS).  THIS IS AN ORIGINAL 1958 PRESSING ON THE NEW JAZZ LABEL (MONO 8205) WITH DEEP GROOVES ON BOTH SIDES. THE GLOSSY VINYL IS IN VG+ CONDITION WITH A FEW LIGHT MARKS , NOTHING THAT CAN BE FELT.  I PLAY GRADED THIS LP AND THE THE FIDELITY IS CRYSTAL CLEAR - OUTSTANDING.  THERE IS A LIGHT TICK FOR THE FIRST 15-20 SECONDS OF TRACK 1 ON SIDE 2 AND SOME VERY LIGHT STATIC ON THE LAST COUPLE TRACKS OF SIDE 1. THE GLOSSY, LAMINATED COVER IS IN VG+ CONDITION WITH SHARP GRAPHICS, NO RING WEAR OR WRITING, DOES HAVE ABOUT AN INCH OF SPLITTING AT THE UPPER RIGHTHAND CORNER (OPENING) AND ABOUT 2 INCHES OF  SEAM EXPOSURE AND CREAS WRINKLE AT THE LOWER LEFT HAND CORNER. OTHERWISE, THE SEAMS ARE CLEAN AND TIGHT.  THE LABLES ARE IN EXCELLENT (EX) CONDITION. LOW RESERVEl!!!! SHIPPING AND DELIVERY CONFIRMATION IN THE USA AND CANADA IS $6.50.  OVERSEAS SHIPPING IS $15.50.  INSURANCE ALWAYS AN OPTION FOR THE BUYER TO ADD.  CHECK OUT OTHER LP'S CURRENTLY LISTED.  ADD ONLY $1.00 SHIPPING AND HANDELING FOR EACH ADDITIONAL LP. 

RECORD GRADING POLICY
Near Mint (NM): A nearly perfect record. There may be one or two small inaudible defects. The record should show no obvious signs of wear. A 45 RPM or EP sleeve should have no more than the most minor defects, such as almost invisible ring wear or other sights of slight handling. An LP jacket should have no creases, folds, seam splits or any other noticeable similar defect. No cut-out holes, either.

Near Mint Minus (NM-): A record that should play mint but has a few slight visible marks. The album will have as much luster as an NM, there just may be some superficial scuffs from the sleeve or very light hairlines that shouldn't be audible. An NM- album cover subjectively fits somewhere in between VG+ and NM.

Excellent (EX): A record that is not pristine enough to be considered NM-, but retains enough of its original quality to be graded beyond the VG+ catagory.  An LP that exhibits minimal problems with fidelity (portions of one track on the entire album) and is otherwise NM- would fall into this catagory.  An LP that has NM- fidelity and VG+ appearance would fall into this catagory.  A jacket and label in this catagory may exhibit one noticeable flaw such as minor splitting, ring wear, writing, creasing, or punch hole/cut out.  More than one of these flaws would relegate a jacket/label to a lower grade.  Any one or more flaws that could fairly be described as severe would relegate an otherwise pristine jacket/label to a lesser grade.

Very Good Plus (VG+): A Very Good Plus record will show some signs that it was played and otherwise handled by a previous owner who took good care of it. Record surfaces may show some slight signs of wear and may have slight scuffs or very light scratches that don t significantly affect play. Slight warps that do not affect the sound are OK. The label may have some ring wear or discoloration, but it should be barely noticeable. The center hole will not have been misshapen by repeated play. Picture sleeves and LP inner sleeves will have some slight wear, lightly turned-up corners, or a slight seam-split. An LP jacket may have slight signs of wear also and may be marred by a cut-out hole, indentation or corner indicating it was taken out of print and sold at a discount.

Very Good (VG): Many of the defects found in a VG+ record will be more pronounced in a VG disc. Surface noise will be evident upon playing, especially in soft passages and during a song s intro and fade, but will not overpower the music otherwise. Groove wear will start to be noticeable, as will light scratches (deep enough to feel with a fingernail) that will affect the sound. Labels may be marred by writing, or have tape or stickers (or their residue) attached. The same will be true of picture sleeves or LP covers. However, it will not have all of these problems at the same time, just two or three of them.

Good (G), Good Plus (G+): Good does not mean Bad! A record in Good or Good Plus condition can be put onto a turntable and will play though without skipping. But it will have significant surface noise and scratches and visible groove wear. A jacket or sleeve will have seam splits, especially at the bottom or on the spine. Tape, writing, ring wear or other defects will start to overwhelm the subject.

Poor (P), Fair (F): Below good. imperfections will be described.

On Dec-12-06 at 16:33:08 PST, seller added the following information:


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