What Would You Do with a Sealed, 1st Press Miles Davis "Kind of Blue"?


This LP is still sealed in the original clear plastic inner sleeve (just one tiny 1/8" circular spot of mold on one track).  The LP cover has clearly seen shelf life making it say VG.   I am curious about what would you do please?  Open and play or sell to buy other records or?  All thoughts and suggestions are much appreciated - thank you 😉
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A FACTORY- SEALED KOB (never opened) from 1959 would be worth several hundred! 
To clarify, the LP is in a sealed, clear, all plastic inner sleeve.  There are no openings, tears, nicks, cuts or similar. Both sides the record are completely visible.  All the tracks and the labels look unmarked (bar the tiny mould spot).   Thank you again for your thoughts.
let’s define some terms here.

you have the record, the inner sleeve, the outer jacket, and the plastic cover for the outer jacket.

the inner sleeve is not sealed on an original pressing. it’s open on one side. if it is sealed then you have a re-issue; and there were dozens, maybe hundreds of separate re-issues of various levels of performance for KOB. most of very limited value and very common.

to be viewed as a sealed original pressing; it would have to have the outer plastic cover be completely sealed and never opened. then you would have to satisfy all the other ’tells’ for an original pressing. which are many.

google is your friend; lots of info out there on 6 eye Columbia Kind of Blue original pressings. and then there are the mono versions too. and the white label promo pressings (most desirable of the early pressings). good luck on your research.

the best sounding KOB is the earliest 4 disc single sided Classic Records 45rpm re-issue. it has the corrected speed and is a fantastic transfer. that one will cost you $500 if you can find it. and it does not matter if it’s sealed.
"sealed original plastic inner sleeve"

Im not certain, but a 1959 mono/stereo release would come in a paper sleeve?

You've done your homework-CL 1355 (mono) or CS 8163?


Columbia Records in the early-60’s had an inner sleeve of very soft, very thin, limp plastic. It was a bag rounded on one side (following the curve of the LP), and perforated on the opposite. One had to rip open the bag liner along the perforation to unseal the LP.

I know this because my mother’s Ring Of Fire: The Best Of Johnny Cash LP was exactly so. I assume the outer cover was also shrink wrap sealed when it left the factory, so the OP’s LP is in one sense still sealed, the other way opened.