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GentleGiant View Drop Down
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Direct Link To This Post Topic: the most expensive album ever bought..
    Posted: August 07 2007 at 09:31
ATILA-Intencion & Reviure (Pan y Musica edition) for $40 Thumbs%20Up
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 07 2007 at 02:49
55 $

Atheist - Unquestionable Presence

Bought it on ebay several years ago, two years before the reissues.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: August 06 2007 at 12:43
Today I pre-ordered Talvikuningas (The Winter King) by the Finnish band CMX. It will cost me 40€. Shocked

Edited by Vompatti - August 06 2007 at 12:44
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 30 2007 at 11:01
Originally posted by MikeEnRegalia MikeEnRegalia wrote:

^ what's the deal with these "first pressings" ... do they sound better, or is it just a collectors thing?BTW: First Utterance was recently re-released on vinyl ... I might even buy it!


Depends on the album.

COURTYARD MUSIC GROUP, for instance, has never been reissued and was only a 100 copies pressing, so it owes its value to both extreme scarcity and musical excellence.

The TUDOR LODGE album, in contrast, owes its value (anything up to £400) solely to the fact that it was on Vertigo and came with a stunning 36" x 36" fold-out die-cut poster cover. Had it been on a mainstream record label and issued in a standard sleeve, it would sell for a fraction of the price, as it is musically very unremarkable (and has been reissued several times).

Despite its presence on this site, TUDOR LODGE has nothing whatever to do with progressive rock or progressive folk. It' a collection of fey, orchestrated folk/pop songs about lovely days out at Kew Gardens and the likes, and is very much a product of the late hippie era. Two tracks stand out: "Willow Tree", which has an acid-folk feel, and "The Lady's Changing Home", which is an excellent melodic rocker in late BEATLES vein (with electric guitar leads and without any strings, which sets it apart from the rest of the album).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 27 2007 at 07:24
Originally posted by lightbulb_son lightbulb_son wrote:

I was finally able to track down a Lightbulb Sun 2 years ago for $45. Why Steven hasn't re-released the album yet I do not know.


I bought it for 18€ (incl. shipping) a few months ago... Wink

The most expensive one in my collection that I've bought myself (thus excluding e.g. Marillion - Marbles Deluxe Edition) must surely be my signed "Deadwing" digibook by Porcupine Tree, which costed me about 30€ LOL. Oh no, it's a tied first place with Singles Box. vol 2 by Marillion Wink
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2007 at 20:39
Originally posted by Certif1ed Certif1ed wrote:

"First Utterance" has been re-released on vinyl before - beware, the first re-issue is awful!
 
The deal with First pressings is that they are the very closest you can get to the original sound, as they came from the original mix on the original master tape - the trick with an audiophile collector like me is to find an early pressing with the earliest stamper numbers on;
 
If you understand the vinyl LP manufacturing process, then you'll realise that the first stampers are going to sound better than later stampers, due to wear on the mothers.
 
That rather fine-detail aside, later runs (2nd pressings and so on) are invariably packaged more cheaply and made with cheaper materials - the vinyl is typically thinner, and thinner vinyl means less up and down movement of the stylus, which equates to a thinner, less detailed sound.
 
Late 1970s/oil crisis pressings are worst of all.
 
Recently there has been a trend for 180g pressings and so on. This is all laudable, but other details need to be taken into consideration, such as the quality of the vinyl itself, and the original source of the music.
 
The very best re-issues are re-mastered at half speed from the original master tapes - some of these can actually be better than first pressings (but only if the first presing was on inferior vinyl).
 
So it depends, really...
 
Thanks for the insight on vinyl pressing. This is where I say "I've learned something new today"LOL
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2007 at 20:33
All on vinyl.
 
Metallica - Metal Up Your Ass (Bootleg) $40
Original (Italian) pressing Pink Floyd - Ummagumma $40
Original (British) pressing Jimi Hendrix - Electric Ladyland $40
Jimi Hendrix - Radio 1 Sessions (Limited German press 5000 copies) $35
Original pressing Lynyrd Skynyrd - Street Survivor (Flaming album cover) $35
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2007 at 13:37
being not a real audiophile (I've never had a great stereo outfit) I rarely listen anymore to vynyl, but this summer I found by chance a record shop in Berlin with a decent vynyl (mint) section and I bought quite cheaply Lancaster/Perry 'Marscapes' which to my knowledge was never released on CD (not such a wild record either, unless you a are a big Brand-X fan) and a Franco Battiato record which I 've neversaw before.
So I am looking more and more into vynyl bargain bins again and it's more fun then I thought. While the average CD bargain bin is 95% garbage, you can find some interesting stuff (see Cert's recent discovery) in vynyl bins. Some weeks ago I found some nice Soft Prog 'Golden Avatar' I bought it mainly for the cover and a 1976 CBS compilation 'Progressive Rock' '(mainly Jazz Rock)just for the title. As I bought most vynyls when they came out, I payed  them the regular price. Maybe the most expensive was a Stan Getz/ Joao Gilberto Japanese pressing which sounds very good and hasn't altered as these cheapo rereleases and  a Deep Purple 'Made In Japan' which I bought in a real small record shop when it came out.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 26 2007 at 13:14
"First Utterance" has been re-released on vinyl before - beware, the first re-issue is awful!
 
The deal with First pressings is that they are the very closest you can get to the original sound, as they came from the original mix on the original master tape - the trick with an audiophile collector like me is to find an early pressing with the earliest stamper numbers on;
 
If you understand the vinyl LP manufacturing process, then you'll realise that the first stampers are going to sound better than later stampers, due to wear on the mothers.
 
That rather fine-detail aside, later runs (2nd pressings and so on) are invariably packaged more cheaply and made with cheaper materials - the vinyl is typically thinner, and thinner vinyl means less up and down movement of the stylus, which equates to a thinner, less detailed sound.
 
Late 1970s/oil crisis pressings are worst of all.
 
Recently there has been a trend for 180g pressings and so on. This is all laudable, but other details need to be taken into consideration, such as the quality of the vinyl itself, and the original source of the music.
 
The very best re-issues are re-mastered at half speed from the original master tapes - some of these can actually be better than first pressings (but only if the first presing was on inferior vinyl).
 
So it depends, really...
The important thing is not to stop questioning.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2007 at 04:21
^ what's the deal with these "first pressings" ... do they sound better, or is it just a collectors thing?

BTW: First Utterance was recently re-released on vinyl ... I might even buy it!
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 22 2007 at 04:07
^ In the world of psych-folk, Comus "First Utterance" and Tudor Lodge's self-titled albums go for similar amounts.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2007 at 13:25
Courtyard Music Group's "Chan Eíl Ann Seo Ach Cuíd Dha'r Du Rachd Dhuít" (1974) for £1000. It's a classic psychedelic folk album, and extremely rare.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2007 at 10:19
We can talk about our bargains here....
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2007 at 09:57
^ I also love to go "bargain hunting" in second hand record/CD stores ... I once picked up Ron Thal's "Hermit" for €6, for example (Ebay).
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2007 at 09:32
Originally posted by mcxwell mcxwell wrote:

So, i found out that A LOT of you guys have a lot of money..
maybe that's what prog is all about...
 
Not at all - you can get loads of prog really cheaply on vinyl in second hand stores;
 
All the Yes, ELP and Genesis albums nearly always appear in the bargain bins, and I snapped up some Steve Hackett, Klaus Schulze, Kansas, Triumvirat and Tangerine Dream recently for about £2 per album.
 
Gentle Giant, Ozric Tentacles, Peter Gabriel, Marillion, Supertramp, BJH, Hawkwind, Rush, Gong, Steve Hillage and Pink Floyd often turn up at bargain prices too - All the foundations of a good prog rock collection Big%20smile
 
If you're lucky, you'll find a first press that the store owner overlooked. I recently found a first press of DSOTM priced at £5 - I felt like I was stealing the thing, as it regularly goes for £150 on eBay, even without the posters and stickers;
 
 
 
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 21 2007 at 09:19
i got a bargain last week - PG's "US" album on double vinyl in mint condition from my local used record store for £1.99 !! Tongue there seems to be a 500% premium on Prog records there - Peter Gabriel is prog-related so that may explain the price drop
Wink
 
 
 
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 20 2007 at 01:28
Between 25-30 bucks for various things I think.  One of which was T. Rex's Futuristic Dragon (on cd). 


Almost 33 bucks for Eddie Hazel's only full length, but that bid went up to 66 after a minute so I didn't bid after my initial 33.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2007 at 23:21
yeah, me too..
but it's very difficult to find cheap prog CDs here..
There is no Best, just DIfferent..
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2007 at 18:00
Just odered Naked City complete studio recordings, for 80 bucks.
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Direct Link To This Post Posted: March 19 2007 at 17:55
Originally posted by lightbulb_son lightbulb_son wrote:

Originally posted by The Miracle The Miracle wrote:

Led Zeppelin's complete studio recordings box cost $120, but that's 9 albums

The Wall - $30... wasn't worth a single one of them

Cluster II - $25... was worth every single one of them

3 Burzum albums for $20 each... totally worth it as well.

Per Un Amico... $20 masterliness.
 
Speaking of expensive albums, your sig cost me $30. Burzum's finest IMO.


I agree it's his best, pure masterliness!Clap But I got it for $18Tongue
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