/
DE

Jim Sullivan HHV Records 4 Items

HHV Records 4 Vinyl, CD & Tape 4 Used Vinyl 1
Hide Filter & Categories Show Filter & Categories
Filter Results
Price
Price
10 – 15 €
15 – 30 €
30 – 50 €
Close
Artist
Artist
1UP
2Pac
A Certain Ratio
A Tribe Called Quest
ABBA
AC/DC
Acrylick
Adamo
Adrian Younge & Ali Shaheed Muhammad
Aerosmith
Aesop Rock
AIAIAI
airbag craftworks
Al Di Meola
Al Green
Al Jarreau
Alex Puddu
Alice Cooper
Alice In Chains
Alton Miller
Amorphis
Amy Winehouse
analogis
Andre Hazes
Angel Olsen
Animal Collective
Antilopen Gang
Aphex Twin
Arcade Fire
Arch Enemy
Aretha Franklin
Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers
Art Tatum
Arthur Russell
ASC
Atmosphere
Audio-Technica
B.B. King
Bad Brains
Bad Religion
BAP
Barbra Streisand
Bathory
Bay City Rollers
Beastie Boys
Beck
Bee Gees
Behemoth
Benny The Butcher
Bert Jansch
Berurier Noir
Bill Evans
Bill Evans Trio
Bill Withers
Billie Holiday
Billy Cobb
Billy Joel
Billy Preston
Björk
Black Sabbath
Blondie
Blur
Bob Dylan
Bob James
Bob Marley
Bob Marley & The Wailers
Bobby Womack
Bonobo
Boo Williams
Boris
Boris Brejcha
Boz Scaggs
Brant Bjork
Brian Eno
Bright Eyes
Britney Spears
Bruce Springsteen
Bryan Ferry
Calibre
Can
Cannonball Adderley
Carole King
Carpenters
Charles Mingus
Charlie Parker
Chemical Brothers
Chet Baker
Chicago
Chris Farlowe
Chuck Berry
Clearaudio
Cliff Richard
Clutch
Cock Sparrer
Coil
Colosseum
Commodores
Common
Cream
Creedence Clearwater Revival
Crimeapple
Cro-Mags
Cult Of Luna
Cypress Hill
Daft Punk
Danger Dan
Danzig
Darkthrone
Daryl Hall & John Oates
Das Wetter
David Bowie
De La Soul
Dead Kennedys
Death
Decksaver
Deep Purple
Def Leppard
Degiheugi
Deichkind
Depeche Mode
Destruction
Dexter Gordon
Diana Ross
Die Drei ???
Die Fantastischen Vier
Dinah Washington
Dinosaur Jr
Dio
Dionne Warwick
Dire Straits
Dismember
DJ T-Kut
DMX
Donald Byrd
Donna Summer
Doro
Dr. Dre
Dream Theater
Drive-By Truckers
Duke Ellington
Duke Ellington And His Orchestra
Duran Duran
Duster
Dynavox
Eagles
Earl Klugh
Earth, Wind & Fire
Eduardo De La Calle
Eels
El Michels Affair
Elbow
Electric Light Orchestra
Ella Fitzgerald
Elton John
Elvis Costello
Elvis Presley
Emerson, Lake & Palmer
Eminem
Ennio Morricone
Eric Clapton
Etta James
Falcom Sound Team JDK
Fela Kuti
Five Finger Death Punch
Fleetwood Mac
Foo Fighters
Foreigner
Four Tops
Frank Sinatra
Frank Zappa
Freddie Hubbard
Fucked Up
Funkadelic
Funko
Genesis
George Benson
George Harrison
Ghost
Gil Scott-Heron
Gladys Knight And The Pips
Gloria Gaynor
Glorious
Godfather Don
Golden Earring
Gorillaz
Graham Parker
Grand Funk Railroad
Grant Green
Grateful Dead
Green Day
Gregory Isaacs
Gregory Porter
Grover Washington, Jr.
Guided By Voices
Guns N' Roses
Hank Mobley
Helloween
Herbie Hancock
Herbie Mann
HHV
Hot Water Music
Howlin' Wolf
Iain Matthews
Ice Cube
Iggy Pop
Ike & Tina Turner
INXS
Iron Maiden
J Dilla
Jack White
James Brown
Jamiroquai
Janis Ian
Janis Joplin
Jay-Z
Jean-Louis Murat
Jermaine Jackson
Jesse Dean Designs
Jethro Tull
Jico
Jim Sullivan
Jimi Hendrix
Jimmy Smith
Joe Hisaishi
Joe Sample
John Carpenter
John Coltrane
John Lee Hooker
John Mayall
John Mayall & The Bluesbreakers
John Prine
John Williams
Johnny Cash
Johnny Hallyday
Joni Mitchell
Joy Division
Judas Priest
Julie London
Karma To Burn
Katatonia
Kate Bush
Keith Jarrett
Kelley Stoltz
Kendrick Lamar
Kerri Chandler
Khruangbin
Killing Joke
King Crimson
King Gizzard & The Lizard Wizard
Kiss
Kool & The Gang
Kool Keith
Kraftwerk
Kreator
Kylie Minogue
Lambchop
Led Zeppelin
Lee Morgan
Lee Perry
Lee Ritenour
Lemon Demon
Lenco
Leonard Cohen
Lerosa
Lester Young
Lewis Parker
Lightning Bolt
Linda Ronstadt
Linkin Park
Little Feat
Lodown Magazine
Lou Reed
Louis Armstrong
Luciano
Lynyrd Skynyrd
M. Ward
Mac Dre
Mac Miller
Mad Professor
Madlib
Madness
Madonna
Magma
Main Source
Manfred Mann's Earth Band
Manhattans
Manilla Road
Mariah Carey
Marianne Faithfull
Marillion
Marvin Gaye
Mastodon
Mayhem
Maynard Ferguson
Melba Moore
Melvins
Metallica
MF DOOM
Michael Jackson
Mike Oldfield
Miles Davis
Misfits
Mobb Deep
Moby
Mogwai
Mono
Morgana King
Mort Garson
Motörhead
Mott The Hoople
Mr. G
Muddy Waters
Muse
Muslimgauze
Nagaoka
Nancy Wilson
Nas
Nat King Cole
Nazareth
Nebula
Neil Young
Neo d+
New Order
Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds
Nils Frahm
Nina Simone
Nirvana
NOFX
Oasis
Oddisee
Olivia Newton-John
Omar Rodriguez-Lopez
Omar S
Opeth
Orlando Voorn
Ornette Coleman
Ortofon
Oscar Peterson
Otis Redding
OutKast
Ozric Tentacles
Ozzy Osbourne
Paradise Lost
Patti LaBelle
Paul McCartney
Paul Simon
Paul Weller
Pearl Jam
Pestilence
Pet Shop Boys
Piero Umiliani
Pink Floyd
Pixies
PJ Harvey
Placebo
Porcupine Tree
Post Malone
Primal Scream
Prince
Pro-Ject
Public Enemy
QED
Queen
Queens Of The Stone Age
Quincy Jones
R.E.M.
Radiohead
Rage Against The Machine
Ramones
Ramsey Lewis
Ray Charles
Ray Parker Jr.
Recognize Ali
Record Box - Vinyl Frame
Record Box - Vinyl Record Storage
Record Outer Sleeve
Red Hot Chili Peppers
Reloop
Rico Friebe
Rico Puestel
Roberta Flack
Robot Koch
Rockets
Rod Stewart
Roland
Ron Trent
Run DMC
Rush
Sam Cooke
Santana
Sarah Vaughan
Sault
Savatage
Saxon
Scorpions
Serato
Serge Gainsbourg
Sex Pistols
Sheena Easton
Sido
Simon & Garfunkel
Skinshape
Slade
Slipknot
Sly & The Family Stone
Smokey Robinson
SolidCutz
Sonic Youth
Sonny Rollins
Soul Jazz Records presents
Sparks
Spinners
Spyro Gyra
Stanley Turrentine
Status Quo
Steely Dan
Stefan Goldmann
Stereo Total
Steve Miller Band
Stevie Wonder
STL
Stones Throw
Suede
Sufjan Stevens
Suicidal Tendencies
Sun Ra
Tangerine Dream
Tank
Tarja
Taylor Swift
Technics
Teenage Engineering
The Band
The Beach Boys
The Beatles
The Brian Jonestown Massacre
The Byrds
The Clash
The Crusaders
The Cult
The Cure
The Damned
The Dave Brubeck Quartet
The Doobie Brothers
The Doors
The Fall
The Isley Brothers
The Jesus And Mary Chain
The Kinks
The Meteors
The Miracles
The Modern Jazz Quartet
The National
The Notorious B.I.G.
The O'Jays
The Police
The Rolling Stones
The Roots
The Stylistics
The Supremes
The Temptations
The Three Degrees
The Unknown Artist
The Ventures
The Wedding Present
The Weeknd
The Who
The Wire
Thelonious Monk
Theo Parrish
Thin Lizzy
Thorens
Thunder
Tom Waits
Tool
Toto
Townes Van Zandt
Ty Segall
Tyler The Creator
U2
UDG
Udo Lindenberg
Ufo
UK Subs
Unknown Artist
Unwound
Uriah Heep
V.A.
Van Morrison
War
Weather Report
Wes Montgomery
Whitney Houston
Willie Nelson
Wings
Wu-Tang Clan
Yes
Your Old Droog
Yungblud
Zomo
ZZ Top
Close
New In Stock
New In Stock
180 Days
365 Days
Close
Preorder
Preorder
Preorder Only
No Preorder
Close
Jim Sullivan
Jim Sullivan - If The Evening Were Drawn Black Vinyl Edition
Jim Sullivan
If The Evening Were Drawn Black Vinyl Edition
LP | 2019 | US | Original (Light In The Attic)
11,99 €*
Release: 2019 / US – Original
Genre: Rock & Indie
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
Preorder shipping from 2024-05-17
Mastered from the original analog tapes
All tracks previously unreleased
Booklet with liner notes and rare archive photos
Deluxe die cut Stoughton “tip-on” jacket with embossed lettering
Vinyl pressed at RTI

On March 4, 1975, Jim Sullivan mysteriously disappeared outside Santa Rosa, New Mexico. His VW bug was found abandoned, his motel room untouched. Some think he got lost. Some think the mafia bumped him. Some even think he was abducted by aliens.

By coincidence–or perhaps not–Jim’s 1969 debut album was titled U.F.O.. Released in tiny numbers on a private label, it too was truly lost until Light In The Attic Records began a years-long quest to re-release it–and to solve the mystery of Sullivan’s disappearance. Only one of those things happened, and you can guess which…

Light In The Attic’s reissue of U.F.O. introduced the world to an overlooked masterwork and won Sullivan, posthumously (presumably), legions of new fans. Those new admirers are in for a real treat: a lavish, first-time release of a previously unheard 1969 studio session.

If The Evening Were Dawn contains 10 acoustic solo recordings that have never seen the light of day. Whereas U.F.O. was bolstered by legendary sessioneers The Wrecking Crew, this is Jim Sullivan on his own terms, stripped down and soulful as ever. Recorded at a Los Angeles studio circa 1969, the session contains acoustic versions of a handful of U.F.O. tracks alongside a half dozen previously unheard songs. This, then, is the closest thing to those fabled Malibu bar performances at which Sullivan was first noticed.

According to his widow, Barbara, this was the album Jim always hoped to record. It serves as an unprecedented glimpse into the mysterious, larger-than-life figure who’s become the stuff of legends.

While Sullivan’s disappearance remains unsolved, his music endures and is finally gaining him the recognition he deserves, albeit long overdue. This recording serves as an unexpected missing piece of the puzzle; this is Jim Sullivan’s true swan song.
Jim Sullivan - U.F.O. Blue Splatter Vinyl Edition
Jim Sullivan
U.F.O. Blue Splatter Vinyl Edition
LP | 1969 | US | Reissue (Light In The Attic)
26,99 €*
Release: 1969 / US – Reissue
Genre: Rock & Indie
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
* Newly Remastered!* Ultra rare 1969 private press psych-folk-rock masterpiece – featuring the legendary Wrecking Crew (Beach Boys, Phil Spector) * Lacquers cut by John Golden Mastering * Plated at Record Technology Inc. (rti) * Includes deep booklet with liner notes by Andria Lisle, rare photos, archival materials and full lyrics (LP: 16-pgs, CD: 48-pgs) In March 1975, Jim Sullivan mysteriously disappeared outside Santa Rosa, New Mexico. His VW bug was found abandoned, his motel room untouched. Some think he got lost in the desert. Some think he fell foul of a local family with alleged mafia ties. Some think he was abducted by aliens.

By coincidence – or perhaps not – Jim’s 1969 debut album was titled U.F.O. Released in tiny numbers on a private label, it too was truly lost, until Seattle’s Light In The Attic Records begun a years-long quest to give it the full release it deserves – and to solve the mystery of Sullivan’s disappearance. Only one of those things happened.

For record collectors, some albums are considered impossible to get hold of, records so rare you could sit on eBay for years and not get a sniff of a copy. U.F.O. is one of those albums. A seventh son, Jim Sullivan was a West Coast should-have-been, an Irish-American former high school quarterback whose gift for storytelling earned him cult status in the Malibu bar where he performed nightly. Sullivan was always on the edge of fame; hanging out with movie stars like Harry Dean Stanton, performing on the Jose Feliciano show, even stealing a cameo in the ultimate hippie movie, Easy Rider.

Friend and actor Al Dobbs thought he could change all that, and founded a label – Monnie Records – to release Jim’s album, enlisting the assistance of Phil Spector’s legendary sessioneers The Wrecking Crew to do so. That’s Don Randi, Earl Palmer and Jimmy Bond you can hear, the latter also acting as producer and arranger.

U.F.O. was a different beast to the one-man-and-his-guitar stuff Jim had been doing on stage; instead, it was a fully realised album of scope and imagination, a folk-rock record with its head in the stratosphere. Sullivan’s voice is deep and expressive like Fred Neil with a weathered and worldly Americana sound like Joe South, pop songs that aren’t happy – but filled with despair. The album is punctuated with a string section (that recalls David Axelrod), other times a Wurlitzer piano provides the driving groove (as if Memphis great Jim Dickinson was running the show). U.F.O. is a slice of American pop music filtered from the murky depths of Los Angeles, by way of the deep south.

With no music industry contacts, the record went largely unnoticed, and Jim simply moved on, releasing a further album on the Playboy label in 1972. But by 1975, his marriage breaking up, Jim left, for Nashville and the promise of a new life as a sessioneer in the home of C&W. That’s where it gets hazy.

We know he was stopped by cops for swerving on the highway in Santa Rosa, some 15 hours after setting off. We know he was taken to a local police station, found to be sober, and told to go to the local La Mesa Motel to get some rest, which he did. Some time later, his car was spotted on a ranch belonging to the local Genetti family, who confronted him about his business there. The next day his car was found 26 miles down the road, abandoned. His car and his hotel room contained, among other things, his twelve-string guitar, his wallet, his clothes and several copies of his second album, but no note, and no Jim. It was as if he had simply vanished into thin air.

Jim’s family travelled out to join search parties looking for him, the local papers printed missing person stories, but the search proved fruitless. Around the same time, the local sheriff retired and the Genettis moved to Hawaii. Jim’s manager Robert “Buster” Ginter later stated that during the early morning hours of a long evening Jim and Buster were talking about what would you do if they had to disappear. Jim said he’d walk into the desert and never come back.

Tracking down the truth behind Jim’s mystery became an obsession of Light In The Attic’s Matt Sullivan (no relation) when he happened upon a copy of the album and fell in love. He took on a cross country pilgrimage in search of master tapes and truth, and came back with neither, despite hundreds of phone calls, e-mails, letters, faxes, private detectives, telepathy, palm readings and meetings with Jim’s wife, son and producer. Thanks to superb digital mastering techniques, Light In The Attic is still able to present a clean, near perfect copy of Jim’s masterpiece for general consumption for the first time. Enjoy. And remember, beyond the mystery, there’s the music.
Jim Sullivan - U.F.O. Black Vinyl Edition
Jim Sullivan
U.F.O. Black Vinyl Edition
LP | 1969 | US | Reissue (Light In The Attic)
24,99 €*
Release: 1969 / US – Reissue
Genre: Rock & Indie
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
Preorder shipping from 2024-05-17
* Newly Remastered!* Ultra rare 1969 private press psych-folk-rock masterpiece – featuring the legendary Wrecking Crew (Beach Boys, Phil Spector) * Lacquers cut by John Golden Mastering * Plated at Record Technology Inc. (rti) * Includes deep booklet with liner notes by Andria Lisle, rare photos, archival materials and full lyrics (LP: 16-pgs, CD: 48-pgs) In March 1975, Jim Sullivan mysteriously disappeared outside Santa Rosa, New Mexico. His VW bug was found abandoned, his motel room untouched. Some think he got lost in the desert. Some think he fell foul of a local family with alleged mafia ties. Some think he was abducted by aliens.

By coincidence – or perhaps not – Jim’s 1969 debut album was titled U.F.O. Released in tiny numbers on a private label, it too was truly lost, until Seattle’s Light In The Attic Records begun a years-long quest to give it the full release it deserves – and to solve the mystery of Sullivan’s disappearance. Only one of those things happened.

For record collectors, some albums are considered impossible to get hold of, records so rare you could sit on eBay for years and not get a sniff of a copy. U.F.O. is one of those albums. A seventh son, Jim Sullivan was a West Coast should-have-been, an Irish-American former high school quarterback whose gift for storytelling earned him cult status in the Malibu bar where he performed nightly. Sullivan was always on the edge of fame; hanging out with movie stars like Harry Dean Stanton, performing on the Jose Feliciano show, even stealing a cameo in the ultimate hippie movie, Easy Rider.

Friend and actor Al Dobbs thought he could change all that, and founded a label – Monnie Records – to release Jim’s album, enlisting the assistance of Phil Spector’s legendary sessioneers The Wrecking Crew to do so. That’s Don Randi, Earl Palmer and Jimmy Bond you can hear, the latter also acting as producer and arranger.

U.F.O. was a different beast to the one-man-and-his-guitar stuff Jim had been doing on stage; instead, it was a fully realised album of scope and imagination, a folk-rock record with its head in the stratosphere. Sullivan’s voice is deep and expressive like Fred Neil with a weathered and worldly Americana sound like Joe South, pop songs that aren’t happy – but filled with despair. The album is punctuated with a string section (that recalls David Axelrod), other times a Wurlitzer piano provides the driving groove (as if Memphis great Jim Dickinson was running the show). U.F.O. is a slice of American pop music filtered from the murky depths of Los Angeles, by way of the deep south.

With no music industry contacts, the record went largely unnoticed, and Jim simply moved on, releasing a further album on the Playboy label in 1972. But by 1975, his marriage breaking up, Jim left, for Nashville and the promise of a new life as a sessioneer in the home of C&W. That’s where it gets hazy.

We know he was stopped by cops for swerving on the highway in Santa Rosa, some 15 hours after setting off. We know he was taken to a local police station, found to be sober, and told to go to the local La Mesa Motel to get some rest, which he did. Some time later, his car was spotted on a ranch belonging to the local Genetti family, who confronted him about his business there. The next day his car was found 26 miles down the road, abandoned. His car and his hotel room contained, among other things, his twelve-string guitar, his wallet, his clothes and several copies of his second album, but no note, and no Jim. It was as if he had simply vanished into thin air.

Jim’s family travelled out to join search parties looking for him, the local papers printed missing person stories, but the search proved fruitless. Around the same time, the local sheriff retired and the Genettis moved to Hawaii. Jim’s manager Robert “Buster” Ginter later stated that during the early morning hours of a long evening Jim and Buster were talking about what would you do if they had to disappear. Jim said he’d walk into the desert and never come back.

Tracking down the truth behind Jim’s mystery became an obsession of Light In The Attic’s Matt Sullivan (no relation) when he happened upon a copy of the album and fell in love. He took on a cross country pilgrimage in search of master tapes and truth, and came back with neither, despite hundreds of phone calls, e-mails, letters, faxes, private detectives, telepathy, palm readings and meetings with Jim’s wife, son and producer. Thanks to superb digital mastering techniques, Light In The Attic is still able to present a clean, near perfect copy of Jim’s masterpiece for general consumption for the first time. Enjoy. And remember, beyond the mystery, there’s the music.
Jim Sullivan - If The Evening Were Dawn
Jim Sullivan
If The Evening Were Dawn
LP | 2019 | US | Original (Light In The Attic)
31,99 €*
Release: 2019 / US – Original
Genre: Rock & Indie
Add to Cart Coming Soon Sold out Currently not available Not Enough Coins
Used Vinyl
Medium: Near Mint, Cover: Near Mint
Clear/Gold vinyl. Still in shrink, but opened, with hype OBI
Back To Top