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I said they were defective
Tight with them? I have known the principals at all three store for over 35 years. If you wanted first releases, you needed to make that known. If you did, and they misstated, then it is on them. If you didn't, even if you required original releases, it is on you, if have have opened and removed the shrinkwrap, and then played them.I'm sorry, but customer service ends when the customer comes back and misstates the album condition for other than the truth. These stores have a well documented return rate on various imports - it is one of the metrics they religiously track - and to have a 40% warped return rate tripped their bullshit meter to overload. They probably felt you had taken the albums home, taped/burned them, and were bringing them back to get another set to follow the cycle again. I would bet money this is the reason they gave you the lowest possible return to stock offer.The burning question - did you request assistance to confirm they were the original pressing, and not reissues?
I'm not tight with them, but I agree with Dave. Do your homework FIRST to make sure you know what your are getting. I've made plenty of mistakes, but if I'm spending $500 I'd damn sure know exactly what I am looking for.
You told them the records were defective because you didn't like how they sounded? For real??-Jim
I don't think it is a matter of being 'tight' with Euclid, I think it's more a matter of "welcome to modern day vinyl buying'. Vinyl today is an absolute crap shoot. so much so that I've stopped buying it. So much of the current vinyl being stamped today simply sounds like hammered shit. Not too long ago I picked up Alison Krauss and Union Station's Paper Airplane and the free MP3 download sounded better than the vinyl.The only vinyl that I know for sure consistently sounds good are the Blue Note re-issues. As much as you and I want new all vinyl to sound good, you'll have better luck picking up a turd from the clean end. As for returning vinyl that has been opened and played, I don't know of any store out there that will allow it. You have to be diligent when you buy vinyl. Make sure they aren't trying to jam 20+ minutes on a single side (<17 sounds best). Read all the notes to make sure they have been cut from the original master tapes and not a high resolution digital file.That typed, hi-rez digital is pretty darned good....typed by a guy that has ~4000 albums and a vinyl set up that costs more than many peoples cars.