Edward R. Murrow - I Can Hear It Now, Vol. II - 1945-1949
About This Record:
Country:
US
Used or New?
Used
Label:
Columbia Masterworks – ML 4261
Barcode (Side A runout): XLP 1774-1H|Barcode (Side B runout): XLP 1775-1J 2|Barcode (Side A label): x"Lp" 1774|Barcode (Side B label): x"Lp" 1775
Estimate delivery times: 3-6 days (Canada) 12-26 days (International), 4-8 days (United States).
Return anything. Anytime.
Edward R. Murrow - I Can Hear It Now, Vol. II - 1945-1949
Record and Jacket Condition
Vinyl Grade: Very Good Plus
Mint
No flaws whatsoever. I never use this grade with used records and most new records will not deserve it.
Near Mint
Virtually flawless, not perfect. A minor scuff and the flaw should be very hard to see. If an imperfection covers more than a few tracks I will rarely give it a record a near mint grade.
Very Good Plus (VG+)
A 'Very Good Plus' record shows cosmetic scuffs and hairlines. Particularly in hard light. Some flaws will be noticeable to the naked eye, there should not be too many. Gloss should be very strong. No imperfection should be textured enough to feel with a finger. Such textured imperfections are called 'feelies'. This record should play with little to no noise. The odd bit of static might just be dust. Most records should be cleaned before they are played and semi-regularly after that.
Very Good
A Very Good record will appear played with numerous cosmetic imperfections. This is a silly grade that makes little sense. A record may appear to be in good condition but play with repeated or continual noise, crackle or static. A record that is in excellent (Near Mint) condition with a single 'feelie' imperfection usually falls into this grade.I do not usually sell records that are below the Very Good grade.
Jacket Grade: Very Good Plus
COMING SOON
Tracklist
A1 | V-J Day Celebrations | |
A2 | Conflict between Russia & the West; The Bikini Atom Bomb Test | |
A3 | The Baruch Proposal for the control of Atomic Energy; International War Crimes Trial at Nuremburg; Execution of ten top Nazi War Leaders | |
A4 | The 1946 Congressional Elections; Lilienthal's "Credo of Democracy"; "Babe Ruth Day" at Yankee Stadium | |
A5 | The Marshall Plan; The Howard Hughes Congressional Hearing; Wedding of Princess Elizabeth and the Duke of Edinburgh; The assassination of Gandhi | |
B1 | Jan Masaryk in United Nations Broadcast; The Italian Elections; The State of Israel is born; James C. Petrillo before the House Labor Committee | |
B2 | The Berlin Airlift; Tito addresses the Third Congress of the Peoples' Front; Vishinsky before the U.N.; Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt before the U.N. | |
B3 | Chambers & Hiss before the House Un-American Activities Committee; Eisenhower reaffirms he will not seek a presidential nomination | |
B4 | The Republican National Convention; The Democratic National Convention; The Progressive Party Convention | |
B5 | The 1948 Pres. Campaign |