BUTTERFIELD BLUES BAND - Resurrection Of Pigboy Crabshaw, In My Own Dream LPs

Description

Two The Paul Butterfield Blues Band albums. Not 21st century represses. See below for condition.

Album and condition (See my Record Grading Guide below - I grade conservatively):

The Butterfield Blues Band - In My Own Dream 1968 LP (Elektra Records - EKS-74025)
Record: VG (light scuffs and a few scratches) / Cover: VG+

The Butterfield Blues Band - The Resurrection Of Pigboy Crabshaw 1968 LP (Elektra Records - EKS-74015). Has the original Elektra Records inner sleeve.
Record: VG (light scratches/scuffs) / Cover: VG (some water damage on bottom back, edgewear)

Message me with any questions. For U.S. bidders, there is a $5.99 flat shipping cost. I'll pack these well in a sturdy cardboard mailer, and they will ship in the U.S. with USPS Media Mail. My collection has slowly outgrown the space I have to hold it, so keep checking back for new listings. Check out the other albums I have for sale on Ebay here. Thanks for looking!

Record Grading Guide

  • Mint (M):
    I only use Mint to describe sealed records. Even sealed covers I often won't grade Mint, depending on the condition.

  • Near Mint (NM or M-):
    NM records are shiny, with no visible defects. Writing, stickers or other markings cannot appear on the label, nor can any spindle marks. When played, it will do so with no surface noise.
    NM covers are free of creases, ring wear and seam splits of any kind. They may have the original shrinkwrap.

  • Very Good Plus (VG+) or Excellent (EX):
    VG+ records may show some slight signs of wear, including light scuffs or very light scratches. Slight warps that do not affect the sound are OK. Minor signs of handling are OK, too, such as telltale marks around the center hole.
    VG+ covers should have only minor wear. A VG+ cover might have some very minor seam wear or a split. Also, a VG+ cover may have some defacing, such as a cut-out marking or price sticker.

  • Very Good (VG):
    VG records may lack some of the original gloss found on factory-fresh records. Groove wear may be evident, as well as light scratches deep enough to feel with a fingernail. When played, a VG record has some surface noise, and some scratches may be audible, especially in soft passages.
    VG covers will have many signs of human handling. Ring wear may be obvious, though not overwhelming. Multiple creases might be visible. Seam splitting can be more obvious, and it may appear on all three sides. Writing, or a price tag, may be present too.

  • Good (G), Good Plus (G+), Very Good Minus (VG-):
    Good records may have significant surface noise, groove wear, worn labels, significant ring wear, heavy writing, or other obvious damage.
    Good covers may have ring wear to the point of distraction, seam splits obvious on sight, obvious writing (marker, pen, etc).

  • Poor (P), Fair (F):
    Poor records may be heavily scratched, cracked or badly warped, and won't play through without skipping or repeating.
    Poor covers may be water damaged, split on all three seams or heavily marred by wear and writing. The cover may barely keep the LP inside of it.