I already saw it once... However, I crossed its way almost hazardeously, it must have showed up in a great large list (afrobrazilero style). The seller, contrarily to the one I just mentioned should be reliable, he buys and sells african records since forever. I think he's right to say it's an extremely rare record. First time on eBay? certainly not, with guys like Samy (Samsoum71, Afrocolombia, Analog Africa) and Afrobrazilero (too bad this guy describes and grades so poorly), so much african heat and raers are brought to the surface... He just said "never saw it on ebay". I did, once. Rare? Of course!
i remember reading an article somewhere about miles cleret's trips down to africa and how he got all gnarly about paying 3-4 cents for records because he was only prepared to pay 1-2 cents, i bet those 1-2 cents have paid off now!
With all due respect: this information is incorrect and misleading. Miles has been working with the same dealer for years and the prices he pays are WAY above what collectors generally offer.
Agreed that record is pretty hot, but at what point is the fire extinguished due to condition?
Isn't the crackling sound a part of any fire?
Years ago I got a laugh out of a guy from South America on ebay selling a hammered copy of a rare record. His poor english description of the condition was "sounds like campfire".
Agreed that record is pretty hot, but at what point is the fire extinguished due to condition?
I don't know--that seller's VG- is actually pretty listenable, and it sold for $88. I put in a (low) bid because in that condition I'd want it mainly for the object/show-piece value, and at that point play condition is almost irrelevant--the grooves could produce the Barney theme song for all I care. A cleaner rip for listening can be procured elsewhere.
With all due respect: this information is incorrect and misleading. Miles has been working with the same dealer for years and the prices he pays are WAY above what collectors generally offer.
i thought as much, as one day he'd have eventually been caught out doing that, thanks for the info.
Comments
Agreed that record is pretty hot, but at what point is the fire
extinguished due to condition?
Isn't the crackling sound a part of any fire?
Years ago I got a laugh out of a guy from South America on ebay selling a hammered copy of a rare record. His poor english description of the condition was "sounds like campfire".
Hey doods look I what I got!
Maybe you should start collecting only sealed records that you never open.
No need for audio equipment means more $$$ for sealed raer.
It's a win win.