ROLLING STONES The Rolling Stones (Once upon a time, young man
was working in a South London garage as an apprentice fitter, he was
a budding guitarist and travelled up to London to audition for a new
band which was forming. His friend, one Bill Perks, went with him for
moral support, taking his guitar with him. The young man didn't get
the job, but Bill did, soon ditching his surname for the name Wyman
and The Rolling Stones took shape. A friend of the young man became
a fan of the youngcombo and regularly went to their gigs in South
London, waiting outside the venue where they would be recognised by
the band, who would then signal the bouncers to let them in to the
venue. It was at one of these concerts that he was able to get his
copy of thier newly released album signed by the whole band. This
then is that album, an astonishing relic from the history of Twentieth
Century popular culture. The unlaminated reverse is fully autographed
with five signatures, Mick, Charlie, Keith [signed as Keith Richard],
Brian & Bill, all seemingly made in the same black felt-tip pen, which
imbues a richness and clarity, often absent on ballpoint pen
signatures. The signatures are nicely placed around the black 'The
Rolling Stones' lettering and are in a beautifully unhurried hand, all
pointing to the fact that this was done with a lot of care and attention,
deserving of the connection the owner had with the band, rather than
just a hurried backstage scribble. This is a one owner copy and has
been stored in a cupboard for the past few decades. The sleeve itself
is front laminated with no flipbacks and has I Need You Baby on the
tracklisting [Mona on the label]. There are spots of discolouration on
the reverse & a light yellowing, although nothing too severe. The front
laminate shows creasing and laminate lift to the bottom corners, with
a couple of chips to the opening edge and no seam splits. This was
obviously an item which was cherished and well used by its previous
owner. The vinyl is on the unboxed red mono label with
6271-2A/6272-5A matrices and has been played to the point where we
would advise replacing it for audio purposes. The chances of us ever
finding another item of this significance are as low as they go, this is
quite literally a piece of history and would be the crowning jewel in
any collection, possibly ending up in a museum one day LK4605)
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