Item Description
Wilcox, Sullivan, Wilcox 1973 LP An Album of Original Music on Goldust Records Cat LPS-163 STEREO An album of original music by Michael Sullivan, Judy Wilcox, and Dennis Wilcox Folky psychedelic rock with lush male-female harmonies.
Bright and brilliant finely textured acoustic guitar work throughout.
Rocks at times, goes into hillbilly country territory at others, presents as honest folk, and it s acid influence is pervasive yet subtle.
Very rare and near-impossible to find private pressing from this New Mexico hippie group.
First one I have seen in 8 years.
Lauded in the Acid Archives: An Album Of Original Music 1973 Goldust Hippie folk psych/singer songwriter with Eastern moves, housed in tremendous acid cover.
There is a second LP, Tomales Bay Goldust, 1975 which is not as good.
Apparently some players here also appeared on the I Love You Gorgo LP from the El Paso label Suemi, several years earlier.
Original USA Private Pressing, BLACK/GOLD Label 33 1/3 r.p.m.
Long Playing Record The Musicians are: Michael Sullivan - lead guitar, electric guitar, vocals Judy Wilcox - vocals, guitar, bass Dennis Wilcox - vocals, guitar Junior Daugherty - fiddle Calvin Turbeville - pedal steel Jerry Dymski - piano and Women s chorus - Melodi Grisham, Elisabeth Porter-Wilcox, Kristin Porter, Caryl Porter Published by Enchanted Music BMI Goldust LPS-163 Stereo 1973 Cover art: One Sri Ramakrishna and Sarada Devi.
A sculptural painting done in cultured marble by Uyjali Clark.
Photograhy: Elisabeth Wilcox.
Produced by Emmit Brooks, Dennis Wilcox, Bill O Harlon.
Engineer: Emmit Brooks Recorded at Emmit Brooks Recording Studio, Mesilla Park, New Mexico Goldust Records Company, P.O.
Box 998 Mesilla Park, New Mexico 88047 SIDE 1 SIDE 2 Holy Man Snow On A Mountain Water is Precious Rivers of Time Dark Side of the Wheel It s all the Same You Never Know Soon I ll See You Little ManVINYL CONDITION:VG a few light scuffs,plays well with some occasional light background sounds SOLID COPY OF THIS HARD TO FIND RECORD SLEEVE CONDITION:VG still has original shrink,bottom right corner split,top right corner wear,two marks on back cover,nice ,clean cover YOUR RECORDS WILL BE PACKED WITH CARE.
IF THIS RECORD SELLS FOR OVER 100 IT WILL NEED TO BE REGISTERED FOR AN ADDITIONAL 12 PLUS SHIPPING OR SENT EXPRESS MAIL.
PLEASE EMAIL ME WITH QUESTIONS,CHEERS Mint M Perfect Condition, which basically means that it is as good as new, literally.
The vinyl has to look new and sound as though it was never played, and the cover has to look untouched.
Some argue that the only mint records are brand new unopened ones still in their original packing.
Near Mint NM Vinyl is near perfect.
At most, a light scuff appears on the record, but it should play without any noise or skips.
The record sleeve should also be near perfect with only minor signs of wear.
There should be no outline sleeve.
Excellent EX or VG Vinyl should still play with no skips of any kind.
There can be some very minor surface scuffs, but they should not affect the sound quality.
The record sleeve can have some minor ring wear but it should be mostly in good shape.
Also, there can be some minor creases in the corners but no splits in the seams.
Very Good VG This is the grading category where the quality of the sound is affected -- there will be some surface noise -- and the vinyl will show wear, including surface scuffs and some light scratches.
However, the record is still very listenable as there are no deep scratches that cause skips.
On the cover, the corners may be slightly bent, but not broken.
There may be wear to the seams but not tears or holes.
Very Good VG Vinyl doesn t necessarily look good, but still plays well enough.
Surface noise will probably be present, including pops and clicks.
At higher volume levels, the music should overpower any pops and clicks present.
There may be seam splitting, but not complete separation of the sleeve panels from each other.
There will be noticeable ring wear on the cover, but the cover should for the most part still be in good condition.
Good VG- Vinyl is well played and looks it.
However, the record should still play without skipping.
It will have substantial surface noise, pops and clicks.
Loss of various parts of the dynamic range will occur due to worn grooves.
This grade depends a lot on the owner and the type of records he or she collects.
A rock record may still sound ok at a high volume, but quieter styles of music will be practically unlistenable.
The record cover may have many problems including seam splits, tears, and writing on it.
Fair/Poor F/P Using the word fair for this quality of record is, in the opinion of JRS, too generous and not recommended since it may be misleading.
Records described as fair F or Poor P in the Goldmine grading system are ones that are basically unlistenable.
Surface noise, skips and pops make hearing what s on the record nearly impossible, if not completely impossible.
The cover is falling apart, torn, and has writing all over it.
The only reason to keep it would be if the record is extremely rare or you want to eventually melt the vinyl and shape it into an ashtray.