What does Uhqr mean concerning records?


My turntable is in the garage and I'm contemplating bringing it back out, but I have no idea what the above letters mean. Anyone help?

Thanks,

Tom
bookert
I second your thoughts, John. I find "Crime" a joy to listen to. I have heard "Sgt. Peppers", but in a unfamiliar setting. It performed quite well appreciated by myself and the others listening.
There were eight UHQR releases by MoFi they are:

Crime of the Century, Supertramp
Dark Side of the Moon, Floyd
Finger Paintings, Earl Klugh
Tea For The Tillerman, Cat Stevens
I Robot, Alan Parsons
Sgt. Peppers, those Beatles guys
and two classical titles,
Fest Romane and Gustav Holst's The Planets.

The inner sleeves are all hand numbered and the packaging is first rate. The records are extremely thick and great expense was taken to produce the best quality recordings that MoFi was capable of. I have most of them and other versions as well and IMHO, with the exception of Dark Side, where the Japanese Pro Use half-speed bests it, and the two classical titles, for which I have no reference, these are, arguably, the very best versions of the music contained on them. The secondary market must feel the same, because the quality, and the rarity, have pushed the cost of these records up to a pretty decent level. If you have one, give it a spin.
I totally agree with Viridian. I have owned them all. They are VERY special indeed.
MoFi I have heard that there were a minimum of three different stampers used for Crime, and that one of them bests the other three. But this was anecdotal and I have never been able to verify the accuracy of this. My copy and the two others that I have seen all have the same matrix numbers. Can you shead any light on this, or is it all just heat?
At the outrageous price sellers ask for one, you'd get much better sound from Better Record's white hot stampers with an equally lighter wallet.