"Yeah, "Pet Sounds" is the one album I may eventually just have to get the RI."
AP is Analogue Productions?
What is RI?
What is LRS? (Local Record Store?)
The birth of a new thread dedicated to sharing our newly-acquired "old" LP's.
scchengmus where do you live? I'm in Plainfield, NJ. I go to Princeton and Bordentown has this very good store: http://www.the-record-collector.com/ also, a small collection in a cool shop other end of the block, same side of the street. visited this store in Milltown, NJ yesterday (very nice) https://revillagroovesandgear.com/ When I'm ready to sell at least 3,500 lps, I'll contact craig here first, then get bids from them. That store in Fords, I was VERY disappointed, it ain't for LP's unless they are hiding them. I met Bill from audiogon, he lives in Burlington, NJ. He came here, 2 masked visits, another time we went to Bordentown LP store/lunch together, we swapped some equipment. If you want to meet, send me a message. We have had both shots for a while now, things are getting easier here in NJ finally. |
I continually peruse used record stores no matter where I travel, in addition to the local shops here where I live. Always find the best stores in the cities I visit and get dirty fingers. I always try to cut to the chase and ask the same questions when I walk in the door - "Have any Mosaic Box Sets? Any original Folkways Blues LPs? Any thing on Takoma? Early Delmark blues?" But, I must admit, it must be a real rare find in great condition or just fun novelty (super bowl shuffle, anyone?) before I will buy it. There are just way to many incredibly sounding rereleases these days that are deserving of my money. New releases also don't make me cringe when a used LP pops & ticks across my high-end cartridge. I focus now mostly on labels. Anything pressed at QRP deserves a listen! Impex, MoFi, Music Matters and so on are starting to fill my selves. |
Recently acquired a stellar collection of first pressing rock LPs that had been left untouched in storage since at least 1972 and never touched since. Every one looked as though they had been pressed, played a couple times and put away. No fading, spots, nothing. Bright, beautiful covers, glossy vinyl. Like straight out of a time capsule. After some cleaning with my Degritter, I spent the weekend spinning: -Jimi Hendrix Experience- Are You Experienced? - Tri-color Reprise Stereo -Jimi Hendrix Experience- Axis, Bold As Love- Tri-Color Reprise Stereo -The Pretty Things- Self Titled 1st LP- Fontana-Mono -Pink Floyd- Saucerful of Secrets- Tower- Stereo -Ten Years After- SHHH- Deram -Stereo -Savoy Brown Blues Band- Shake Down- Decca UK ffss- Stereo -ZZ Top- First Album- London-Stereo -T Rex- Electric Warrior- Reprise- Stereo Have another 8 or 9 to go through. Fantastic listening experience. |
Congrats on finding your pot at the end of the rainbow. I’m a Brian Wilson fan too, but, as of a few years ago he can barely sing anymore. 6 months younger Johnny Rivers can still belt AND blast the same licks he did 50 years ago. AND he is not even in the Cleveland hall. https://www.mcall.com/entertainment/mc-johnny-rivers-easton-state-theatre-20151112-story.html "Rivers says his piano player, Larry Knechtel, "was a fan of that song and that record. And I remembered it, and he brought it up to me. He said, You ought to re-record ’Rockin Pneumonia.’ So we did and he played the piano on it and it was fabulous – that great piano solo on that thing, and it had a good feel." It was a Top 10 hit and helped revive Rivers’ career — and, indirectly, the career of Brian Wilson of The Beach Boys. To follow up, Rivers says he decided to cover The Beach Boys’ "Help Me, Rhonda." "I had gone to a Beach Boys concert … And the last song they did was ’Help Me Rhonda,’" Rivers says. "I was driving back to L.A. and that song kept going around in my head." The next day in the studio, he cut "kind of a funky R&B version of it, and it came out really good." All that was missing, Rivers says, "was that high harmony part that sounds like a falsetto – almost like a girl singing; the Brian Wilson part." Rivers says he played the song for a friend who knew Wilson, who called up the reclusive Beach Boy and played it for him. Wilson said he thought it would be a hit. "And I said, ’Your part is the only part missing, that high harmony. We got the studio tomorrow, why don’t you just come on down and throw that part on there?’ And I didn’t think he’d show up, but he did, and he did it in one take and it was absolutely perfect." Rivers says Wilson at the time was struggling with personal problems and was not recording with The Beach Boys. "Well that came out so good and it got on the charts — it was a Top 20 record — that it gave him the confidence to go back and start recording with The Beach Boys again," Rivers says. "So I think that’s one of the important things about that song and that recording. Not only that he sang on it, that it kind of got him going again."" |