How To Spot A Butcher Cover

 

ButcherCover

Easily one of the most sought after albums is Yesterday and Today by the Beatles.  Not just the album, mind you, but the controversial cover version known as The Butcher.  The original butcher image was realeased in 1966, but very few made it to market.   The image of the Beatles in butchers smocks and covered with raw meat and decapitated dolls was a little risque for the time (likely just too risque for Capitol!).  The label pulled the copies and had a slick pasted over the offending image.  The new pic was 4 happy Beatles, three around a steamer trunk with Paul sitting inside it.  Of course, those who got the album with the new image were quick to try to peel off the slick which damaged a good number of covers.  Because of this, there are 3 versions of a butcher cover:

  1. First State – The originally released cover that has never had the second image pasted over it.  They can range in value from a few thousand dollars for a mono version to forty-plus thousand for a stereo version, depending on condition.
  2. Second State – A butcher album as in 1 above, except with the new image pasted onto it.  These are increasingly rare as more and more people have theirs peeled.  You can actually pay someone to do this for you.  I am not one to tell you what to do with your album but JESUS CHRIST – DO NOT DO THIS!  Ahem, please.
  3. Third State – It’s a peeled Second State.  You can pick them up for $100 for a poorly peeled one, to a couple thousand for one in good shape.  I’m lucky enough to have 2 Third States, both are a little beat up, but here’s the better of the two:

photo 4s

So that’s what they are, cool?  Now comes the fun part in figuring out if you have a Second State cover!

There are 4 key things you need to see to have a butcher:

1. They must have a paste on slick style cover where the back slick wraps around to the front and the front image is pasted over top:

photo 2s

2. On the back by the RIAA symbol there will be a number from 2 to 6.  These signify the Capitol plant that pressed it:

photo 1s

3.  When they pasted the new image overtop the butcher, Ringo’s turtleneck bled through and can be faintly seen on all Second State butchers.  It resembles a black triangle on the right side of the album, to the right of the top of the steamer trunk:

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4.  In order to accommodate the paste-over slick, Second States are a bit narrower than later pressings of the album (about 1/8th of an inch):

photo 3s

 

Whether a butcher or not, the album is definitely worth having.  I wish you luck in finding one.  Even better, I wish you luck in finding a Canadian Butcher, which were issued but there are only 6 known copies and Capitol destroyed the original covers! Cheers

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3 thoughts on “How To Spot A Butcher Cover

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