AMIGA
Profile: |
East German label, former State label of the German Democratic Republic (DDR). |
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Parent Label: |
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Sublabels: |
Big Beat (10), ... |
Info: |
Manufacturer EUSony Music Entertainment GmbH Bülowstr. 80 10783 Berlin https://discogs.librosgratis.biz/cdn-cgi/l/email-protection" class="__cf_email__" data-cfemail="345f5b5a40555f4074475b5a4d5941475d571a575b59">[email protected] |
Links: |
amiga-schallplatten.de
, Facebook
, x.com
, liedderzeit.de
, gdrobjectified.wordpress.com
, Wikipedia
, Wikipedia
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Label
Label
For sale on Discogs
Sell a copyReviews
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Edited 3 years agoThe main problem with the inconsistent Amiga vinyl pressings is the fact,
that they have to blend the rare virgin vinyl with slate powder. -
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Edited 11 years agoI lived in West Berlin from 1988-92 and I purchased an arm full of these releases from the former East Berlin, I would play them once and record them to cassette because the assumption was that these records were made of inferior quality and the sound would degrade gradually the more you played them. Anyone know if that assumption is true?
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Most of the AMIGA records have plain white inner sleeves. Only a very few have lyrics or ment printed on them. You can find printed inner sleeves not much earlier then the 1980s.
Licensed editions mostly have no printed inner sleeves.
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I recently got about 8 Amiga releases and all had plain white inner sleeves. They all came second hand from the same place, so I am wondering if this person just replaced all the inner sleeves with new white ones or if all Amiga releases came that way.
One of them was Dark Side of the Moon (which I am glad to learn is a Quadraphonic version) and it was also without the posters and stickers.
I am thinking that maybe Amiga releases did not come with picture inner sleeves or any of the inserts that came with other original releases, but not sure and wonder if anybody knows more about these German releases.