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Photos at https://lostvinylgemsofthe60s.blogspot.co.uk/ Ladies and Gentleman, you are looking at a piece of record collecting history, certainly the find of the century so
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Now we know the true origin of John Manship's auction descriptions .
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I'm still stunned by this. Couldn't be more shocked if I'd found the copy myself. Think I was the first person to ask the mysterious NickW how much he wanted for it.
Photos at
https://lostvinylgemsofthe60s.blogspot.co.uk/
Ladies and Gentleman, you are looking at a piece of record collecting history, certainly the find of the century so far. Darrell's modest US hit was released by London on a yellow demo copy, but before the record could actually be released, they were hit by an injunction from EMI Records whose Stateside label had the rights to the tracks. So the demo was withdrawn (after maybe 300 copies got out) and the record came out two weeks later on Stateside. Picked up by the fledgling Rare Soul scene almost immediately, both sides have deservedly gone on to be regarded as major classics of the genre.
So why is this particular record so special? Well, it was found by someone I only know as NickW and posted up on Soul Source on sunday night. Quality of the photograph was poor, and knowing that this didn't exist on a stock copy - not a single one discovered in 48 years - I was incredulous to say the least, and literally said I'd believe it when I see it. Not long after, Nick posted up these high quality scans, as well as close ups of the run off groove matrixes, and I said there and then that it was kosher and was indeed the first ever Darrell Banks issue to be discovered. I posted both sides up to Facebook, and within an hour it had, as some people might say, "gone viral".
It was found in the collection of a an ex-Decca employee.
Who knows, perhaps the day after he received this one, the order came through that the record was now not going to be released due to copyright problems, and all copies would have to be destroyed.
Poor NickW has more or less had to go into hiding to escape hordes of mad bidders offering to take it off his hands. Nick appears to be a collector and he is contemplating keeping it. Good for him.
In my opinion, this is the rarest record ever released in the UK. People may refer to Sex Pistols GSTQ on A & M, but we know that a couple of dozen copies of that were given away to staff at the time.
This is - as yet - a one off. A Northern Soul collector with the financial backing might pay up to £10,000 for this. If I had the money I would easily pay £5000. But if NickW does decide to sell it, he shouldn't underestimate the London label collectors out there - they don't like demos, they just want the stock copies, and here is that elusive, one-off stock copy.
If I was given the job of selling it - it would be going to Sotherbeys. This is a slice of 7" vinyl history.
Now we know how Howard Carter must have felt when he entered that tomb back in 1922 and found it totally intact - this is UK label Northern Soul collecting's Tutankhamun moment. Let's hope there's not a curse on it!
Edited by Pete S