A Big Beatles Garage Sale Haul
by beatlesblogger
June 3, 2013
In my previous post I was bemoaning the scenario where you make the effort to get out and about early on a Saturday morning on the hunt for Beatles vinyl - and return frustrated and empty-handed.
Not so this last weekend which produced a wealth of great Beatles treasure, including one LP I'd not seen before and I didn't have a copy of. My son has taken to joining me on these forays into others people's garages and front lawns. He calls it "crate digging". He's on the lookout for jazz plus wide range of other artists he might be able to take samples from to load into his computer. He then uses short grabs from these to mix into new songs he's creating himself.
Anyway, we go to this one house early Saturday morning and the lady says yes, she has some records, but as she hasn't gone through them and she doesn't want to put them out right now. If we could come back after lunchtime she'd find them (somewhere up the back of a very packed garage) and we could have a private look through to see if there is anything we want. We like the sound of an exclusive crate dig and return at the appointed time. She's dragged out four very large plastic bins filled with records and we begin to look through....
First out of the crate comes an Australian copy of Sgt Pepper. It is in the old-style gatefold cover with the fold-over tabs, plus it has the original paper inner and the "cut out" insert. Things are looking good. This one is on the old Parlophone black and silver "Stereo Banner" label. Jaesen Jones, the author of "An Overview of Australian Beatles Records", says this label was used on some pressings of Pepper by EMI here between between the years 1967-1969:
Nice. Next find was an Australian copy ofLet It Be. It's not an original issue, but one of the many, many re-issues of this disc. This one is on the Apple label and is in pretty good condition - near mint. Here's the rear cover and label
While flipping through the boxes we got talking to the lady and it turns out this collection of records (which was literally a couple of hundred discs across a wide variety of genres - but mostly rock and pop) came from a very well-known Sydney radio and TV personality. He was an old family friend and years ago when moving house asked the lady if she wanted his records...
Next I find, in quick succession, a Beatles White Album and an Abbey Road (both re-issues on Apple and probably about the same vintage as the LIB above). The White Album even has the poster and all four photos and is in very good condition:
Further digging then reveals a red The Beatles/1962-1966, again an Australian copy, with the Apple label and a red background. It has both lyric sheet inserts and is in reasonable condition. Not mint, but OK:
The final Beatles treasure to come out of these crates is a bit of a rarity. It's an album I've not seen before - Birth of Legend. A New Zealand release from 1983 on the budget Music World Records, it features twelve songs from the famous Decca audition tapes:
As the liner notes on the rear cover say, the Decca audition refers to the now-famous audition by the Beatles for Decca Records before they reached international stardom. In what was considered one of the biggest mistakes in the music business ever, Decca decided to reject the band selecting instead a band called Brian Poole and the Tremeloes.
So, after a weekend before of nothing, this time around it is a different story.
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