Funkadelic S/T
chase
767 Posts
recently coped a copy of this album, how can I tell if it is an OG or a later pressing? Mine has white cardboard, and has W2000a - 1b and W2000b - 1b in the dead wax
Comments
http://www.popsike.com/GEORGE-CLINTONS-FUNKADELIC-FIRST-ALBUM-mint-orig-LP/270222137320.html
http://www.popsike.com/FUNKADELIC-ST-WESTBOUND-LP-psych-funk-NEAR-MINT/350157917064.html
http://www.popsike.com/Funkadelic-st-Westbound/150277271752.html
http://www.popsike.com/RARE-FUNKADELIC1st-ALBUM1st-PRESS-ORIG-WESTBOUND-LP/200323342933.html
http://www.popsike.com/Funkadelic-Self-Titled-WB-2000-1st-press-VG/120382324230.html
This is all you had to do....notice how all of these are referring to 2000 and how some of these copies you can see white rolling up from the opening on the side of the record.......notice how a lot of the descriptions speak of the thin OG covers and represses have thick covers etc etc..
The label looks like a legit Westbound orig (compare to say Ohio Players or something).
There is a second issue with the all blue Westbound/20th Century label.
Honestly the repro labels aren't even close, so it shouldn't be hard to tell.
General question (sorry for the thread derailing):
Which labels were known to use white cardboard prior to, say, 1980?
I'm asking because that's usually the obvious sign of a reish, but it doesn't always hold.
Like Motown, for example. A lot of early 70s Motown LPs are printed on white cardboard.
And I still need a real-life copy of the Funkadelic S/T so I can stop being a wiener.
what about Poppy? i have that Townes Van Zandt s/t on that label. the lp and innersleeve are clearly original , and i don't even know about later reissues that are on the Poppy label. but the cover is not paste-on and there's white cardboard on the inside.
and obviously lps on Pompeii, like Ike Turner, have white cardboard that make them seem to be newer than they are.
Couldn't tell you a list but the white cardboard test in conjunction with the smell test serves me 99% of the time in reish id
I was recently trying to discern the undiputed truth s/t, and since it's gordy, early 70's I believe it should have white cardboard as you'd said.
You should rework the sentence to say "prior to 1973," because white cardboard really started to come on strong around then.
As far as before '73, two good bets would be Elektra and Nashboro.
Elektra could go both ways. I sold my copy a long time ago, but I do remember that Crabby Appleton's self-titled first album had white cardboard.
I have that TVZ - mine's white too. The 70s reish is on Tomato.
Usually it's pretty easy to identify if the white's indicating a later pressing - of it's legit the label will be the contemporary design of that company, there might be a barcode on it... but usually these are Scorpio exact repro's people are asking about, and the heavy-gloss, slick sleeve and different typeface on the label will give those away.
Edwards Generation