180 gram vinyl records
Wednesday, September 12, 2012
Click to see update price Court and Spark (180 Gram Vinyl)
Saturday, September 8, 2012
Buying In the Court of King Crimson (200 gram vinyl) (LIMITED EDITION)
Amazon.com Check Price In the Court of King Crimson (200 gram vinyl) (LIMITED EDITION)
Featuring the original 1969 stereo mix, pressed on 200 gram super-heavyweight vinyl from newly cut from masters approved by Robert Fripp. Comes complete with the original iconic gatefold sleeve and MP3 codes giving access to a download of a transfer of an original 1969 pressing.
Amazon.com Check Price In the Court of King Crimson (200 gram vinyl) (LIMITED EDITION)
Saturday, July 21, 2012
Buying 12 REAL 12inch 33rpm LP Records Arts & Crafts Decoration 50's 60s Party Artwork
12 REAL 12inch 33rpm LP Records Arts & Crafts Decoration 50's 60s Party Artwork Feature
- Random batch of 12inch LP's
- a little bit too scuffed and common to sell individually.
12 REAL 12inch 33rpm LP Records Arts & Crafts Decoration 50's 60s Party Artwork Overview
I sell the most popular paper & plastic sleeves of all sizes for vinyl records and cds! I also have divider cards, mailers, & more. Bigger and smaller quantities in my store amazon.com/shops/SleevieWonderAvailable at Amazon.com Check Price Now!
Friday, July 13, 2012
Online Shopping Waiting for the Sun (180 Gram Vinyl)
Waiting for the Sun (180 Gram Vinyl)
Waiting for the Sun is The Doors' third studio album. It was released in 1968 and became the band's first and only number one album and spawned their second US number one single, 'Hello, I Love You.' It also became the band's first hit album in the UK, where it peaked at #16 in the chart. With the exception of two songs, the material for this album was written after the band's initial songs from the formation of the group had been recorded for their debut album and second album, Strange Days. The highlight of this album was supposed to be the lengthy theatrical piece 'Celebration of the Lizard', but in the end only the 'Not to Touch the Earth' section was used. The song 'Waiting for the Sun' would not appear on an album until Morrison Hotel.Tracklisting:Side oneHello, I Love You - 2:14 Love Street - 2:53 Not to Touch the Earth - 3:56 Summer's Almost Gone - 3:22 Wintertime Love - 1:54 The Unknown Soldier - 3:25 Side twoSpanish Caravan - 3:03 My Wild Love - 3:01 We Could Be So Good Together - 2:26 Yes, the River Knows - 2:36 Five to One - 4:26
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Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Best Product Maggot Brain (180 gram vinyl)
Maggot Brain (180 gram vinyl) Buy from Amazon.com
1971's Maggot Brain is Funkadelic's all-out masterpiece. Absolutely no one working in soul and funk at the time had the scope, vision, to pull off the kind of record that George Clinton and his collaborators have made here. Eccentric funk jams are book ended by two of the heaviest tracks (Maggot Brain and Wars Of Armageddon) ever committed to tape. The title track, and album opener, is nothing short of mind-blowing, Eddie Hazel's guitar is a revolution brought on by Clinton asking him to play 'as if your mother just died'. An essential classic and the deepest album to come out of the Parliament-Funkadelic camp. 180 gram vinyl in a deluxe classic style gatefold sleeve.Available at Amazon.com Check Price Now!
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Best reviews Hotel California [180 Gram Vinyl]
Hotel California [180 Gram Vinyl]
Mastered from the original analog master tapes. Features all original packaging.
It's no accident that The Eagles Greatest Hits might one day pass Michael Jackson's Thriller as the best-selling album of all time-- the Eagles made great singles. By contrast, their albums could be spotty and strained by self-conscious artistry. Hotel California was arguably the band's best single album--it was certainly the Eagles' biggest original disc-- and it also underscored the band's need to make a big statement. The title tune reflected the album's theme of paradise lost in California, painting this picture with a musical arrangement that punctuated strumming guitars with dramatic drums, and perhaps the band's most famous lyric: "You can check out any time you like, but you can never leave." "New Kid in Town" was an equally fine albeit much more traditional Eagles ballad. "Life in the Fast Lane" aspired to hard rock but largely gunned its engine without taking off. The rest is okay, but nothing more than secondary Eagles songs that happened to be nestled into the album that came to define the `70s supergroup. --John Milward