Singles:
A1: Decca
A2: Coed
A3: Big Top
A4: Gee
A5: Brunswick
A6: Fire
A7: Epic
A8: Epic
A9: Mercury
A10: Climax
B1: Capitol
B2: Dolton
B3: Chess
B4: Mercury
B5: Mercury
B6: Roulette
B7: Gee
B8: Argo
B9: Brunswick
B10: Fury
B11: Mercury
C1: Imperial
C2: Chess
C3: End
C4: Ember
C5: Ember
C6: José
C7: Roulette
C8: Dot
C9: Liberty
C10: United Artists
D1: Calico
D2: Mercury
D3: M~G~M
D4: Jubilee
D5: Rama or Hall
D6: Gee
D7: Stax
D8: Mercury
D9: Vee-Jay
D10: Capitol
These Are The Original Label They Where Released On As 45s
American Graffiti is based loosely, in part, on Wolfman Jack who actually recorded, engineered & edited his famous radio shows at a radio station he managed in Minneapolis, MN suburb of Golden Valley then sent to the Mexican station.
coveboy: Was this originally released with a wider single cover?... noting your image 664657 (insert).
My copy is a gatefold cover with the insert image on the inside of the back (right) jacket.
The inside front (left) has a black & white photo collage of scenes from the movie.
Just noticed:
* black / spectrum burst label: 1973
* tan / brown border label: 1977 reissue (gatefold)
* sky, clouds, rainbow label: 1980 reissue (gatefold??)
Added earlier label style scans fmc, I saw this movie in the theater and loved the music in it. I remember when the trailer came on TV it would ask "where you in 62?"