Product Description
High Quality, Hard To Find SX-74 SQ 4-Channel Quadraphonic Japanese Pressing! Vinyl Still In Top Condition. Heavy Grade Gatefold Cover With Two Inserts. This SQ Quadraphonic Record Can Also Be Played On Conventional Stereo Equipment. The Classic Simon And Garfunkel Album, Featuring “Bridge Over Troubled Water”, “Cecilia”, “Keep The Customer Satisfied”, “The Boxer” & More!
Condition – Vinyl: NEAR MINT! So well looked after for over 51 years!
Condition – Cover: VERY GOOD PLUS! Some spots of foxing inside gatefold, due to being over 51 years old!
Japanese vinyl pressings are highly sought after by audiophiles and collectors, due to their premium sound quality and beautifully presented packaging. The sonic quality of Japanese records is regarded as the best in the world. No wonder all the original Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab records were pressed in Japan! The covers are printed on better quality heavy stock paper too. Near Mint condition Japanese pressings are becoming scarcer ~ and therefore more collectable and valuable every year.
Side 1:
Bridge Over Troubled Water
El Condor Pasa
Cecilia
Keep The Customer Satisfied
So Long, Frank Lloyd Wright
Side 2:
The Boxer
Baby Driver
The Only Living Boy In New York
Why Don’t You Write Me
Bye Bye Love
Song For The Asking
AMG –
Between the record's overall quality and its four hits, the album held the number one position for two and a half months and spent years on the charts. Bridge Over Troubled Water was one of the biggest-selling albums of its decade, and it hasn't fallen too far down on the list in years since. Apart from the gospel-flavored title track, which took some evolution to get to what it finally became, however, much of Bridge Over Troubled Water also constitutes a stepping back from the music that Simon & Garfunkel had made on Bookends -- this was mostly because the creative partnership that had formed the body and the motivation for the duo's four prior albums literally consumed itself in the making of Bridge Over Troubled Water. The overall effect was perhaps the most delicately textured album to close out the 1960s from any major rock act. Bridge Over Troubled Water, at its most ambitious and bold, on its title track, was a quietly reassuring album; at other times, it was personal yet soothing; and at other times, it was just plain fun. The public in 1970 -- a very unsettled time politically, socially, and culturally -- embraced it; and whatever mood they captured, the songs matched the standard of craftsmanship that had been established on the duo's two prior albums. Between the record's overall quality and its four hits, the album held the number one position for two and a half months and spent years on the charts, racking up sales in excess of five million copies. The irony was that for all of the record's and the music's appeal, the duo's partnership ended in the course of creating and completing the album.