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Tracklisting & More Information
This is an original, not a modern repro.
There were reproductions printed during the eighties, including some in very high quality by MFSL, but this is not one of those.
So, how can you tell ?
For starters, the MFSL reproductions that were produced for their Woodstock sets had one of the articles replaced with an article headed 'Mobile Fidelity Sound Labs', which detailed their part in the restoration & remastering of the original concert audio. This does not have that article, so an MFSL reprint it is not.
Here it starts to get more tricky ....
The paper inside is of high quality textured stock with the first & last page of printed semi transparent rice paper. The plain white pages have a 'coated' smooth feel, while the coloured pages are quite obviously high quality textured ragpaper or similar.
How To Spot An Original :-
1) The 'f' in '3 days of peace & music' on the cover must be on the yellow daisy.
This one quite clearly is. Repros have tended to vary the placement & font of the text. This is probably the easiest test, although there are further confirmations
2) The back cover text full stops [periods] are ROUND, where the reproductions are squared. These are quite clearly round.
3) The programme should be exactly 10 7/8 inches long and 8 3/8 inches in width. This programme is exactly those dimensions.
4) The staples should be exactly 2 5/16 inch from the top & bottom of the program. These are.
5) On The Grateful Dead page, all text should be in RED. Many of the repros had this text in black for ease of [cheaper] printing. The text on this is red.
6) The first & last pages should be printed on semi transparent rice paper/onion skin. These are.
7) There should be a selection of occasional & random small white dots in the black printed pages as a result of dust getting into the printing process. This in itself would not be enough to prove authenticity, but suffice to say there are indeed random dust spots present in the black printed pages.
8) Provenance. Often understated, this can be key in knowing exactly what you are looking at. This programme came from a collection of US programmes that mostly dated from the early sixties to the late seventies, so it is not a stranger found amongst a collection of modern programmes, but dates to the period covered by most of the rest of the collection.
Given the above tests, which this programme passed 100%, we can therefore be confident that this is the real deal from over forty years ago when the world briefly woke to a brighter new dawn.
An amazing item.
Condition:
There is a little discolouration to the outer cover but this is quite minor in nature.
There is also evidence of an unknown liquid stain which affects the front left top corner of the programme and a miniscule amount at the top of some of the internal pages, which has led to a small amount of paper loss in places measuring at most 5mm. This is most noticable at the top of the dark pages.
There is a 2cm tear at the top of the Bert Sommer page [backing onto The Who page] with the remains on the Blood, Sweat & Tears page, which presumably happened at the same time as the liquid stain to the top left corner.
The effect of the unknown liquid has only penetrated that far and by the Jeff Beck page is no longer an issue.
Other than that, the internal pages are as clean as a whistle, with no other creasing, staining or writing.
So, less than perfect, but only the second one of these that we have ever seen. Given the environment it survived, a small liquid stain [probably beer!] and a bit of scuffing at the corners is more than acceptable.
In over thirty years of trading, we've seen more Dr. Z LPs than these programmes, so to call it extremely rare is an undrestatement.
TOUR PROGRAMME
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