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Scranton/NAMI pressings are characterized by a unique symbol stamped in the trail-off space of the record. Although often described as a stylized anvil, a comment on a relevant post on this blog (see 03/18/2017) claims it was modeled after the U.S. Capitol Building, as the pressing plant was owned by Capitol Records before NAMI. |
Back in 2016, I took a shot at organizing and classifying the various U.S. versions of this timeless masterpiece based on the album track listings and production credits printed on the rear side of the gatefold sleeve (see 07/29/2016). A year later, in 2017, I delved deeper into how matrix numbers and dead-wax markings relate to the earliest U.S. pressings from Columbia Records' three plants — located in Santa Maria, CA; Terre Haute, IN; and Pitman, NJ — which were in operation during the 1970s. This effort might have helped fellow collectors identify individual vinyl copies and shed further light on pressing variations (see 05/21/2017). These two posts have remained among the most-read entries on this blog. Still, as any collector knows, an effort like this is never truly finished. There's always more to uncover, and the work goes on.
A recent example is the addition of the Compatible eXpansion (CX)-encoded LP (Columbia JC 33795), which was claimed to significantly suppress vinyl surface noise (see 09/30/2021 and 10/08/2021). This short-lived and somewhat controversial pressing was released in late 1982 or early 1983, following the Half-Speed Mastered series (HC 33795 for the original and HC 43795 for the reissue), which were far more widely recognized as an audiophile-oriented edition, in contrast to the mostly unnoticed and overlooked CX-encoded pressing. In this post, I introduce an earlier issue bearing the original catalog number PC 33795, although several variations with this code have been known — particularly in the rear sleeve text descriptions, as explained previously (07/29/2016).
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The Scranton/NAMI pressings are easily identified by their intermediate-sized stamper rings (Ø = 1.5" = 38 mm), distinguishing them from Columbia's Santa Maria, Terre Haute, and Pitman pressings (for a comparison of stamper rings, see 04/23/2022). |
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As far as I've seen, Scranton/NAMI pressings came in the last version of the "PC"-code sleeve, which features a separate production credit on the title track and a single-line producers' credit at the bottom for the remaining seven tracks. This version removed the price code (X698) beneath “COLUMBIA STEREO” on the spine. Note that all known "PC"-code sleeves lack the barcode imprint found on the subsequent "JC"-code sleeve used for the reissues (for rear sleeve variations, see 07/29/2016). |
— Continued to Part 2.
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