Logo
Logo
Logo
Log in

Knowledge Hub

  • Games
  • Consoles
  • Condition & Grading
  • Pricing & Value
  • Buying & Selling
  • Market Insights
  • Glossary

Buy on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Auctions & Buy Now
  • Shipping
  • Trade protection

Sell on Golisto

  • How it works
  • Private sellers
  • Partner shops
  • Fees
  • Verified
  • Tools & bulk upload
  • Premium auctions

Trust & Safety

  • Escrow & protection
  • Verification
  • Ratings & rules

Help

  • FAQ
  • Contact
  • Buyers
  • Sellers
  • Disputes

About Golisto

  • Mission
  • Team
  • Press
  • Careers
  • Partners

Legal

  • Terms & Conditions
  • Privacy Policy
  • Cookies
  • Accessibility
dao
dhl
gls
visa
mastercard
paypal
applepay
klarna
amex
Great4.2 / 56 reviews
regionWorld
languageEnglish
currencyEUR

© Golisto ApS - Made with ❤️ in Copenhagen.

The Beatles 1967 - 1970 (The Blue Album) - Vinyl Album

Item image

1967–1970 (widely known as "The Blue Album") is a compilation of songs by the English rock band the Beatles, spanning the years indicated in the title. It was released with 1962–1966 ("The Red Album"), in 1973. 1967–1970 made number 1 on the American Billboard chart and number 2 on the British Album Chart. This album was re-released in September 1993 on CD, charting at number 4 in the United Kingdom.

the beatlescompilationthe blue albumvinyl

Owner

Seller avatar
Limeyoung
★★★★★5.0(30)
User has been a member for 8 years
🔒 Buyer Protection
All in-app purchases are covered by our trade protection. Learn More

Pay with

MastercardVisaKlarnaMobilePayApple PayGoogle Pay
More from seller
See allarrow icon
Find similar items
See allarrow icon

Related buyer guides

  • GamesPAL Exclusives: The Regional Retro Games Worth HuntingPAL was its own market, with its own scarcity and prices — and a handful of games that never left the region. Here's how to hunt regional retro games without overpaying.
  • Market InsightsWhy FPGA Consoles Are Quietly Eating the Retro MarketAsk anyone who tried to buy an original Super Nintendo last year and they'll tell you the same thing: a decent boxed console isn't the casual pickup it was five years ago. Loose consoles still turn up cheap, but clean examples with the right cables and a working RGB-capable board have crept steadily upward. And here's the thing collectors are only now admitting out loud — a growing chunk of players have stopped chasing the original hardware altogether. The reason is sitting on a lot of shelves
  • Condition & GradingThe Original Xbox Clock Capacitor Is Eating Your ConsoleEvery unserviced original Xbox from the early production runs is carrying a small time bomb on its motherboard. It's called the clock capacitor — a stubby little component whose only job is to keep the system clock ticking while the console is unplugged — and on revision 1.0 through 1.5 boards it has a well-earned reputation for leaking electrolyte as it ages. That fluid is corrosive. It creeps out from under the capacitor, eats the copper traces around it, and does all of this silently while th