Ken Macomber (director); James Wesley Miley (director and trumpet); Frankie Marvin (vocals); Ward Pinkett (trumpet); Hilton Jefferson (alto sax and clarinet); Albert "Happy" Caldwell (tenor sax); Wilbur de Paris (trombone); Bill Benford (tuba); Bernard Allison (banjo and guitar); Earl Frazier (celeste and piano); Tommy Benford (drums); with unknown others
A) BVE-62233-3
B) BVE-62232-3
Recorded Victor Studio, 155 E. 24th St., Manhattan, New York, NY, May 16, 1930.(DAHR)
Produced by Loren L. Watson
Images
Number:3372194 THUMBNAIL Uploaded By:Mike Gann Description: Victor V-38138 A-side label
Number:3372196 Uploaded By:Mike Gann Description: Victor V-38138 B-side label
Number:3651922 Uploaded By:Leedon● Description: A Side Label.
Number:3651923 Uploaded By:Leedon● Description: B Side Label.
This "Special Record" sticker was attached to all kinds of Victor records when they were imported to the United Kingdom because The Gramophone Co., Ltd. held the British copyright on the Nipper trademark, and so it needed to be blocked out on Victor records imported to Britain. I've created a list of similar releases on Discogs, https://www.discogs.com/lists/Victor-HMV-paste-over-records/504820.
I am not sure how many of the same record were imported at any one time, but I wouldn't say that these records with paste-over labels were "specifically made for another territory." They were made for the US market and got the paste-over label when some of them were exported to the UK.
I did know that the US standard version was up. But the copy I put up was made in the U.S. for the UK market and states clearly on the label with a special sticker. The general rule on 45Cat has been that if a record is specifically made for another territory it either becomes an export issue or it gets lumped in with that territories releases creating a new label entry. Where you have moved it to does not even have a note on it to reflect that it was issued in the UK.
Is there a different set of rules for 78Worlds that I have not been made aware of?