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Kaotic Stylin - Closer To Your Love FLAC album

Tracklist

Closer To Your Love
Infinity
Flavor Freestyle
Love The One You're With
Let's Get It On
Love Letters

Versions

Category Artist Title (Format) Label Category Country Year
BSR317 Kaotic Stylin Closer To Your Love ‎(12", Whi) Beat Scott Records BSR317 US 1991
BSR 317 Kaotic Stylin Closer To Your Love ‎(12", Yel) Beat Scott Records BSR 317 US 1991


Kaotic Stylin - Closer To Your Love FLAC album

Musician performer: Kaotic Stylin

Title: Closer To Your Love

Country: US

Date of release: 1991

Genre: Hip hop

Size FLAC: 1467 mb

Rating: 4.2 / 5

Votes: 809

Other Formats: AIFF MOD VOC VQF MP2 RA APE

Related to Kaotic Stylin - Closer To Your Love FLAC Albums

Delirium
This record was pressed with white labels. But soon after they discovered they incorrectly labeled the mastering plates. The A-side was designated with "BSR 317 B" in the dead wax, and the B-side was designated with "BSR 317 A" so when they put the labels on, they put them on the incorrect sides because they were assuming what the mastering plates said was correct. So, they recalled as many as they could, and stuck yellow labels over the white ones on the correct sides. So if you have a yellow copy, the A-side will have "BSR 317 B" in the run-out, and vice versa for the B-side. In the years since it's release, almost every copy I've had with the yellow labels, the label itself has begun to peel away, or has completely fallen off the record. I have not seen any yellow label copies that did not have any white labels under the yellow labels which leads me to believe this was not pressed a second time. The record is hard to find, so the quantities are definitely limited.As far as the record, I first discovered it when I heard "Flavor Freestyle" on late night college radio. Wildman Steve played it a bunch of times on Monday night WBAU 90.3 FM, as well as Jeff Foss on WRHU Hofstra. A bunch of record stores in New York City did NOT have it, and no one even heard of it. But I got lucky in a small record store on Long Island, found it completely by accident too! That's the way it was with many lesser known underground records back then. I bought the only two copies they had. This was late in 1991, maybe October or November. The Low End Theory was pumping hard when this record dropped.
Delirium
This record was pressed with white labels. But soon after they discovered they incorrectly labeled the mastering plates. The A-side was designated with "BSR 317 B" in the dead wax, and the B-side was designated with "BSR 317 A" so when they put the labels on, they put them on the incorrect sides because they were assuming what the mastering plates said was correct. So, they recalled as many as they could, and stuck yellow labels over the white ones on the correct sides. So if you have a yellow copy, the A-side will have "BSR 317 B" in the run-out, and vice versa for the B-side. In the years since it's release, almost every copy I've had with the yellow labels, the label itself has begun to peel away, or has completely fallen off the record. I have not seen any yellow label copies that did not have any white labels under the yellow labels which leads me to believe this was not pressed a second time. The record is hard to find, so the quantities are definitely limited.As far as the record, I first discovered it when I heard "Flavor Freestyle" on late night college radio. Wildman Steve played it a bunch of times on Monday night WBAU 90.3 FM, as well as Jeff Foss on WRHU Hofstra. A bunch of record stores in New York City did NOT have it, and no one even heard of it. But I got lucky in a small record store on Long Island, found it completely by accident too! That's the way it was with many lesser known underground records back then. I bought the only two copies they had. This was late in 1991, maybe October or November. The Low End Theory was pumping hard when this record dropped.