Aug 16, 2015

My First Vinyl Bootlegs (continued)

As told in the last blog, 34 years ago, I obtained the following titles as my first bootleg records.
  • THE JERSEY DEVIL: Ragamuffin Gunner (2LP, TMQ 5468)
  • YOU CAN TRUST YOUR CAR TO THE MAN WHO WEARS THE STAR (2LP, TAKRL 24903)
  • DON'T LOOK BACK: Collectors Item 1974-1980 (LP, PUD 104)
I well remember that I wouldn't try to listen to these records for a while after the very first play. This was simply because the sound quality was intolerant for me who was a novice to these underground products. Once getting accustomed to bootleg sound, however, I became absorbed in these live recordings (especially those performed with radically different arrangements such as Incident, Tenth Avenue, and For You, and stunning covers of I Want You and Up On The Roof). Moreover, I became gradually interested in the amateurish appearance of printed or slick covers (as a non-US resident, I had long wondered the album title and front sleeve drawing of YOU CAN TRUST ... until I obtained the relevant information on the Texaco company through internet search).

Cheapest homemade labels I have ever seen: from left to right, Side 4 of THE JERSEY DEVIL, Side 4 of YOU CAN
TRUST ...
and SIde 1 of  DON'T LOOK BACK. The original labels are shown below for comparison.

Aug 14, 2015

My First Vinyl Bootlegs

Still keeping my first purchases in 1981, although these
are not original but mediocre pirated copies
It was a summer midnight in 1981. When I was listening to my favorite AM radio program, the female DJ suddenly and briefly introduced information from an anonymous listener reporting Springsteen's bootlegs that were right in stock at a major import record shop in my habitation area. Although I never had the experience of listening to any bootleg records back then, I already knew about such famous titles as 'E' TICKET and FIRE ON THE FINGERTIPS through media articles featuring the lawsuit against the Californian bootleggers. As I owned all the official album releases (up to THE RIVER) at that point, this information was enough to stimulate my ever-growing interest in these underground releases.

So that weekend, I went to the shop and asked the shopkeeper what bootleg titles were available. While explaining to me that some box sets were already sold out, he showed me three remaining titles that came in the crudest LP sleeves I had ever seen. Nevertheless, I bought them all without hesitation because, whatever they were, I had decided to do so since I heard of these bootlegs on the radio. This was how it all started. I still keep these vinyl LPs even though I have not listened to them for decades, and I know they are worthless pirate copies.
— To be continued.

Jul 18, 2015

BORN IN THE U.S.A. Japanese test pressing LP w/ flyers (and advanced promo cassette tape)

Despite the fair condition, this test press sold extremely well
(from actual auction)
Auction watching continues. Regularly checking Yahoo! Japan auction for rare Springsteen collectibles, I saw another case of high competition that has ended early this week (July 13) with the incredible final bid of over $500. The auctioned item was a test pressing copy of Japanese BORN IN THE U.S.A. LP (CBS/SONY 28AP 2850) in a white plain cover with the small custom sticker. The total bid volume was 29 from six competitors (again I was just watching, not joining the auction). Interestingly, at least two bidders seem to have joined the auction of the custom promo-only THE "LIVE" cassette tape which was mentioned on the last blog (July 12).

Jul 12, 2015

THE "LIVE": The Legend Comes Alive Japanese promo-only cassette tape

Certainly rare but over-valued?
The blog article this time, unlike regular ones, is not on vinyl but about cassette collectible. I had been watching with a great interest a Yahoo! auction in Japan since last week because of highly competitive bidding. The auctioned item was the above-mentioned custom promotional-only cassette tape (CBS/SONY XDKP 93022), which ended up a few days ago (July 9) with the final bid close to $300! I guessed the final bid amount would be around one-third of the actual one, though. As you can see, this particular auction resulted in total cumulative bids of over 20 that were actually placed by three presumably hard core collectors (I did not join the auction, just following).

Jul 5, 2015

BORN TO RUN US pressing LP variants: a major production error

A short note that follows the series of BORN TO RUN US pressing LP variants. This regular copy is actually not a variant but an erroneous product with the gate-fold interior sleeve being upside down. The catalog number PC 33795 suggests that this one is an early copy but found out to be rather one of the later pressings, as the outer rear sleeve prints the producer name correctly in a single line. The hand-etched matrix codes are AL-33795-1G on Side A and P BL-33795-1A MCR on Side B. I obtained this a couple of years ago on eBay where the US seller did not stress this spectacular error on the item description, so the auction ended with no competitors and cost me only the starting bid of $1.99. As always annoying, however, the international shipping took much more money ($22.74).