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| Snappin' |
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Feat. young Joc Tags : T-Pain |
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Affichage : 43386
Durée : 231 s |
| Theophilus Beckford - Easy Snappin Coxsone Production 1956 |
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Theophilus Beckford - Easy Snappin
First rec. ca. 1956 at Federal Records Studio,
Kingston, Jamaica, prod. by Coxsone Dodd From
Coxsone's first session at Federal, this is
archetypical slow-motion Jamaican boohie played by
Cluett Johnson on bass, Ian Pearson on drums, Ken
Richards on guitar, with Roland Alphonso on tenor
sax and Rico Rodriguez soloing strongly on
trombone. Pianist T Beckford delivers the vocal,
which sent dancehall patrons wild.
released on:
ca. 1959: 7": Worldisc /JA
1962: 7": Island /UK
Has Any Body Out There Got Any Info On This Actual
Record Bcus Whats The Label? No Artist/Tital No
Matrix N0 And The Is Record Is Made Of Metal/Alloy
Inside Why? Could This The Very First Press? And
That Info Was From The Internet Hopefully Some One
Has Some Info On It!!!
And I Did The Vid Like That At The Start To Show
You The Label...And As You Can See In The Vid U
Can See The Metal Or Alloy That Its Made Of...So
Ive Been Seaching The Net And Found This Now
WHAT IS AN "ACETATE"??
An acetate disc is cut prior to the cutting of the
master disc which is used for mass production of
records. Even though referred to as an "acetate",
it is essentially an aluminium disc coated with a
fine film of nitro-celluolose lacquer with no
acetate in it at all! I can tell you right off the
bat that they're nothing special to look at. They
do not come in a frame. There is NO picture
sleeve, and no special artwork on the record
labels. Most acetates are 10" round, but the
actual music record grooves are usually 7" in
diameter.When you physically handle an acetate,
you'll notice that it's extremely stiff. Depending
on whether the acetate is a "metal" plate or made
from some other material, you'll notice that it is
not nearly as "flexible" as a standard record.
Acetates are not made from a variety of material.
They are only made of: aluminum disc with a thin
coating of nitro-cellulose lacquer. Most times,
you'll even notice that the acetate smells kinda
funny, almost like that "moldey, library kinda
smell" - this is because they've usually been
sitting around for years in storage, or in the
record company's archives. The origial
mustard-colored paper sleeves are usually what
gives the acetates their funny smell Since
acetates were never designed to see the light of
day (much less be sold in a store), they're
nothing special to look at, unfortunately. But if
you can get your hands on one, you're sure to have
an extremely rare and unique piece of musical
history Tags : acetate vinyl pressing reggae prince buster coxsone dodd studio one ska trojan 45s skinhead isle duke rico Rodriguez Kin |
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Affichage : 2097
Durée : 206 s |
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