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Re: [ARSCLIST] LP pressing question
From: Patent Tactics, George Brock-Nannestad
Philip Holmes wrote:
> Well, real test pressing or not, a 10" Atlantic acetate is going to
> command attention from today's collectors.
----- it is much easier to fake an "acetate" than a pressing, so I would be
much more wary of an "acetate" than of a pressing. Getting proper shellac mix
or shellac substitute is quite difficult, but to cut a fresh laquer on old
stock Audiodisc or the similar is not difficult. Add a musty envelope and a
few surface scuffs, perhaps leaving the cut disc in the air to vent some of
the camphor - and you are in business. The label might have to be faked in
off-set printing, but do you know - sometimes you find piles of unused test
record labels sitting around. The only thing that remains is to use the
correct glue for sticking-on that label on the "acetate" - but I'm not
telling what that is.
This is also why I am much more wary of early Berliners - no label to
authenticate the record. And who knows what ebonite (= hard rubber) feels
like, anyway. Faking by re-casting is not at all unimagineable. Sold at e-bay
- well everything goes ("going, going, gone!").
Kind regards,
George
>
> Bob Olhsson wrote:
> > -----Original Message-----
> > >From Aaron Levinson: "...I think you'd be very surprised by the number
> of
> > actual test pressings
> > that do turn up..."
> >
> > The practice of sending out a few hundred promo copies that looked like
> test
> > pressings was VERY common. We even occasionally sent out 10" acetates to
> get
> > a program director's attention as did Atlantic.
> >
> > Bob Olhsson Audio Mastery, Nashville TN
> > Mastering, Audio for Picture, Mix Evaluation and Quality Control
> > Over 40 years making people sound better than they ever imagined!
> > 615.385.8051 http://www.hyperback.com
> >
> >