Fu10 The Galician Gotta 45 — High Quality

The A-side, titled “A Gotta da Fronteira” (The Gotta of the Border), fuses traditional muiñeira rhythms with a funky, syncopated bassline that James Brown’s horn section would have envied. The "Gotta" was an improvised dance step that mixed the Scottish Highland fling with the Latin boogaloo. It never went mainstream, but in the fishing villages of Pontevedra, it was a phenomenon.

If you are a collector of rare European folk-rock, Spanish underground funk, or simply a devotee of the "Gotta" dance craze that swept through Northwestern Spain in the late 1970s, you have likely chased this ghost. But what exactly is FU10? Why is it considered "high quality," and what is the "Galician Gotta"? This article dives deep into the grooves of one of the most elusive 45s to ever emerge from the Iberian Peninsula. First, let’s decode the identifier. "FU10" is not a traditional catalog number from a major label like Zafiro or Movieplay. Instead, it appears to be a matrix number etched into the dead wax of a specific run of 45 RPM singles. In the world of audiophiles, "high quality" usually refers to two things: the pressing weight (virgin vinyl) and the mastering source. fu10 the galician gotta 45 high quality

The "FU" prefix is believed by collectors in A Coruña to stand for Fonoteca Universal —a short-lived, boutique pressing plant that operated out of Santiago de Compostela between 1978 and 1982. The A-side, titled “A Gotta da Fronteira” (The

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