History's Dumpster = GLORIOUS trash! Kitsch, music, fashion, food, history, ephemera, and other memorable and forgotten, famous and infamous pop culture junk and oddities of yesterday and today. Saved from the landfill of time...
In my years of record collecting, one thing is guaranteed.
Somewhere, somebody will tell me "Oh, I have an original rare Elvis record. Wanna see it?" I usually do. Because this may come as a surprise to a lot of people, but many, if not most Elvis records really aren't that valuable.
They're everywhere. There are very few truly rare recordings of his that are not available in his other albums. They have also been reissued and altered in so many ways, it's very hard even for a lot of collectors to discern what is a truly valuable Elvis album and one that isn't. And all of his RCA albums sold millions.
Usually unless the label is Sun, or a first pressing, a test or promo pressing, a Quadraphonic release, coloured vinyl or foreign copy or a very special pressing (and your blue vinyl copy of "Moody Blue" isn't one of them. Sorry.) - all still shrink wrapped. the chances are slim it's worth a lot of money. Condition of the jacket and inner sleeve matters as much as the condition of the record itself. And 99% of the time, I'm shown a disappointment.
Especially Elvis' Christmas Album. I lost count of how many people have shown me their '70s Pickwick issues of this album, thinking it's worth thousands.
I know deep down, they truly mean well and it's an old record. And it's Elvis. But if you really want a test in the art of diplomacy, try as hard as you can to let them down easy. I might as well have insulted their mothers by the way they react. (Because often, it was their deceased mother's copy.)
So I try to explain how they are confusing sentimental value with actual monetary value. And it then becomes something Freud himself would give up on.
But I know how finicky serious collectors are. And they have no time for that stuff. But not everyone is a serious collector. Just a clean, scratch free copy will do.
So here's a quick and visual primer on Elvis' Christmas Album. Starting with the actual 1957 edition. Find a 1st pressing in a Still Sealed or Near Mint condition everything and I'll show you something that may be worth a hundred. $1,000 records of any artist are SUPER rare.
Original 1957 copies of this album were in mono (not "electronically
reprocessed" fake stereo) and came in a deluxe package with a photo
album.
The cover artwork was changed for the 1958 reissue. The photo album was no longer included in the package.
Pay attention. Can you spot the differences in the front cover of the 1958 reissue above and the 1964 reissue below?
The 1964 reissue
Back of 1964 reissue cover
(Fake Stereo 1964 version)
And here's the ugly truth: Most reissues from this point on were made in this crappy unbalanced echo chamber of fake stereo. Which hearing this through quality headphones is like hearing "Blue Christmas" in a wind tunnel. All the Pickwick reissues were made off the fake stereo masters.
The cover artwork was changed again for the 1970 RCA Camden budget release.
On this version, there's a different track listing with the more religious songs missing or replaced.
RCA turned over it's Camden line to Pickwick in 1974. On the 1976 Pickwick reissue, the cover art changed AGAIN.)
And with another alternate track listing.....
After Presley died, RCA ended it's licensing agreement with Pickwick. But did not reissue the album again until 1985 for Elvis's 50th Anniversary series. Digitally remastered. With the original artwork and photo album. On green vinyl and original track listing restored.
Subsequent CD/Tape/Vinyl releases had OTHER alternate covers and track listings. It's one of the most blatantly commercialized Christmas albums out there and it's pretty much flotsam and jetsam. Just different packages for more or less the same thing.
This was a budget priced compilation that appeared in various
drug/department store/supermarket Christmas LP racks in the early '70s.
Side 1 is a sort of condensed version of Crosby's classic LP Merry Christmas. But strangely without "White Christmas".
Side 2 was a hodgepodge compilation of instrumental holiday classics. Namely the first track on Side 2, Leroy Anderson's 1950 original version of "Sleigh Ride" (Granted, Arthur Fiedler put out an excellent stereo version, but his version doesn't have the sonic impact of Leroy Anderson's mono original.)
At this time, MCA was beginning to consolidate it's labels (Decca, Kapp
and Uni.) Over the next two decades, they would acquire ABC, Motown,
A&M, the PolyGram Group to become
Universal Music Group, the biggest record label conglomerate in the
world. They acquired Capitol/ EMI in 2012.
This "War on Christmas" hogwash is what it is. Hogwash.
The only ones declaring any kind of "war" on this holiday are in my opinion, those who have to nitpick over other people's beliefs to get others worked up and angry at a time we should be doing better things.
This would be yet another by now fairly typical Columbia Special Products '70s Christmas compilation album were it not for two tracks on it whose artist names literally jumped off the back cover when I found my copy in a Goodwill a few years ago.
"The Christmas Song" Carol Burnett...
...and "Here's To You" Cary Grant, which was also released as a B-side 45 RPM single in 1967.
This 45 is extremely hard to find in merely acceptable condition. The single's equally classy A-side "Christmas Lullaby" can also be found on the 1971 A Very Merry Christmas Volume 3 CSP compilation for the now defunct East Coast department store chain, Grant's.