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JohnnyH
02-01-2003, 08:35 AM
.. .for silly money!!

http://cgi.ebay.com/ws/eBayISAPI.dll?ViewItem&item=2503801881&category=1057

mudbone
02-01-2003, 08:44 AM
YIKES!!!!!:bigeek:

Hawklord
02-01-2003, 08:51 AM
But remember perfect sound forever, so it's probably worth it at twice the price. HEE hee

MikeT
02-01-2003, 08:53 AM
Hey, I have a copy. I had it from day one when it was released - I can sell mine for a bargain - How 'bout only $450. :p

Mine is opened and played though, so maybe I will have to reconsider and go for $350. :laugh:

Actually mine is not for sale, but if someone actually buys this thing for over $550 I might have to reconsider and sell mine. :D

joachim.ritter
02-01-2003, 09:46 AM
Originally posted by MikeT
Mine is opened and played though, so maybe I will have to reconsider and go for $350. :laugh:

Used copies usually sell for around US$ 100 ...

Joachim

Ed Bishop
02-01-2003, 09:54 AM
Laugh all you want, gang, but something tells me he'll get his price. It's sealed and that counts for a lot, and it's clearly authentic. Some Beatle fan who just has to have it will cough up the dough.

ED

MikeT
02-01-2003, 10:15 AM
Originally posted by Ed Bishop
Laugh all you want, gang, but something tells me he'll get his price. It's sealed and that counts for a lot, and it's clearly authentic. Some Beatle fan who just has to have it will cough up the dough.

ED

Actually the auction is almost over and he doesn't even have one bid yet - so he may have to lower his price.

In hindsight, if I knew this was going to be worth so much I would have bought all the copies the record store I worked at had received. :D

Back when this came out the store I worked in got 4 copies at $36.00 each.

I was once offered $150 for mine, before it was actually released worldwide a few years later, but I declined.

Come to think of it in hindsight I probably would have bought many things that I never did - and on the other hand it is within my nature to open everything I buy - instead of keeping it sealed for collector's sake.

Oh well.

RetroSmith
02-01-2003, 10:52 AM
Well, you can be sure that no one will bid, and then 5 mins after the auction closes, he will get a flood of email offers.

I'd seriously doubt he gets over 300$ tho....you would have to be nuts.

ted_b
02-01-2003, 11:02 AM
Wow, I think I will sell my copy. It sounds warmer, yes, but c'mon.

Holy Zoo
02-01-2003, 11:14 AM
There have been used copies that have gone on ebay over the last couple of years for as low sa $30. One sealed copy went for just over $100 about 2 years ago.

Ed Bishop
02-01-2003, 11:15 AM
Originally posted by ted_b
Wow, I think I will sell my copy. It sounds warmer, yes, but c'mon.

Hmmm....wouldn't go that far, but...this time he may be a victim of bad timing: it's sold for more than that on eBay in the past, but what with today's events, nobody may be paying much attention to auctions right now. And he'll probably ignore the e-mails, though I'm sure he'll get 'em.
But I agree he'll have to lower that price if he wants to sell it right away.
Very rare when something like this doesn't get so much as a single bid, but maybe that's because his tactics were wrong. Usually the seller sets a reserve price, rather than a BIN on something like this. That makes it a real auction; BIN at that price, I now realize, is just too unrealistic. I should have been thinking of the reserve aspect, since that ultimately is how you sell boutique items to maximum bid. Besides, if he bought all those copies when he says he did--no more than $25, which is what I paid for mine, IIRC--getting $300 for it is a tidy profit. But eBay does foster greed, doesn't it?

ED :cool:

Michael
02-01-2003, 11:37 AM
Originally posted by Ed Bishop


Besides, if he bought all those copies when he says he did--no more than $25, which is what I paid for mine, IIRC--getting $300 for it is a tidy profit. But eBay does foster greed, doesn't it?

ED :cool:

Is it greed or market value?...I'll be darned if I wouldn't want to get the MOST I could for an item up for auction.:thumbsup:
A "business" man not a collector...a different breed altogether.

joachim.ritter
02-01-2003, 12:48 PM
Originally posted by Holy Zoo
There have been used copies that have gone on ebay over the last couple of years for as low sa $30. One sealed copy went for just over $100 about 2 years ago.

If you want to sell that stuff for a good price you need a high starting bid or a high reserve. I sold a sealed copy for US$ 411 a couple of weeks ago. Actually I hoped to get US$ 500 for it.

Esprit pays "£100 for this if in mint/excellent condition". And they are selling it for a *much* higher price!

Joachim

Lance Hall
02-01-2003, 02:01 PM
I just got a CDR of the Toshiba "Abbey Road".

The CDR is surprisingly brighter and has much less bass than the official EMI CD. Playing the CDR I have to raise the bass about 4 dbs and lower the treble about 10 dbs to make it sound similar to the EMI CD.

Is this how the Toshiba is supposed to sound?

Lance Hall

Holy Zoo
02-01-2003, 02:45 PM
Hmm... I never thought of my (original, not cdr) copy as being bright. But then again, I don't have the later pressing to compare against.

lukpac
02-01-2003, 02:50 PM
The Japanese pressing is certainly much brighter than any other version I've heard, CD or LP.

My guess is they jacked up the treble on that - not uncommon for a Japanese issue.

Ed Bishop
02-01-2003, 03:34 PM
Originally posted by Michael


Is it greed or market value?...I'll be darned if I wouldn't want to get the MOST I could for an item up for auction.:thumbsup:
A "business" man not a collector...a different breed altogether.

I'd agree with you, except in the description the guy kept bemoaning how his wife was after him to get rid of some of them....doesn't quite sound like a businessman, but a guy who just hoarded a bunch, figuring there was a score down the road. 'mymusicfix' he ain't.

Now, about the *brightness* of the Japan ABBEY ROAD.....I could tell you more if I had the domestic copy at hand, but wouldn't you know it's the Odeon disc I can find:rolleyes: ...oh well. While Luke may be right, that the top's been boosted a tad, I still love the overall sound of this one...good bottom end, just nice detail all around. But just because discs from Japan have gotten a rep for being boosted in the upper mids and treble doesn't mean this one was...equally possible the EMI UK version had its natural highs NR'd a little. Our general, collective dissatisfaction with the Beatles as currently on EMI CD's already tells us only a few of them(MMT, for one)are generally worthwhile, and even then some improvement's are in order. Whatever, the Odeon's my version of choice, and can't imagine a reason to sell it for $50 or $500.

ED:cool:

PMC7027
02-01-2003, 03:38 PM
There's a bid!!!!!

Holy Zoo
02-01-2003, 03:43 PM
There's a sucker born every minute!

GregY
02-01-2003, 03:44 PM
What does OBI mean? I'm usually pretty good with abbreviations but this one alludes me. Outer box insert?

Holy Zoo
02-01-2003, 03:45 PM
Originally posted by GregY
What does OBI mean? I'm usually pretty good with abbreviations but this one alludes me. Outer box insert?

It's the little paper sleeve band that goes around the cd on the left.

David R. Modny
02-01-2003, 03:46 PM
Originally posted by GregY
What does OBI mean? I'm usually pretty good with abbreviations but this one alludes me. Outer box insert?

I believe "obi" loosely translates into Japanese as "sash". Hence, what it kind of looks like...a sash. At least, that's what the Red Trumpet catalog said.

GregY
02-01-2003, 03:48 PM
Thanks Holy Zoo. Actually I found an even better description:

OBI is actually an abbreviation, meaning Original Band Intact; the "Original Band" is the paper sash wrapped around most Japanese LPs. In a strange twist the abbreviation has become the verb and the original band is now referred to as an Obi, whether it is intact or not!
The Obi usually carries information in English and Japanese. Obis are easily damaged so an LP where the Obi is intact will sell for a premium.

From the Glossary of Record Collecting Terms. (http://www.collectorshelp.com/gloss.htm)

Ed Bishop
02-01-2003, 03:52 PM
Originally posted by David R. Modny


I believe "obi" loosely translates into Japanese as "sash". Hence, what it kind of looks like...a sash. At least, that's what the Red Trumpet catalog said.

David's right; 'sash' or 'wraparound' will do the trick. For vinyl, it was a band of paper glued at one end that fit through the spine and generally kept to the extreme left. Its intention was to 'advertise' the album beyond the cover graphics, to make it stand out in the bins(and to advertise other Lp's in the catalog). For CD's, Japan OBI's are just folded paper serving the same purpose. A few very early Japan releases I have use a kind of adhesive paper that actually stuck to the front of the tray and wrapped around the spine and back. Despite this, you could open the cover reasonably far without risk of stretching the adhesive OBI. Which, unfortunately, also meant it can't be removed without ruining it, and makes using a new jewel case impossible without spoiling the look or devaluing the package.

A mint OBI for vintage vinyl is, to many collectors, just as important as the rest of the package; they won't buy the Lp, regardless of condition, without the strip that's supposed to come with it. Collectors, eh?;)

ED:cool:

-=Rudy=-
02-01-2003, 04:23 PM
Golly--"ufo.mania" is the winning bidder. $550?? Hmmm...gives me ideas... ;) (Although I doubt mine would fetch anywhere near that much.)