Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl product image (primary)
Album cover style image of a shirtless man crouched in a corner against a wooden wall with the text 'CREED' and 'my own prison' at the top.

Creed

Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl

$12.99$24.60-47%
In Stock

This is a gently used item in good condition. Item may show some signs of use like minor scratches or minor stains. The box may have some damage or the item may not ship in its original box. Relive a defining moment in post-grunge rock with the Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl. Celebrating its 25th anniversary, this debut album delivers powerful vocals, heavy guitar riffs, and emotionally driven lyrics that launched Creed into global success. Now available on vinyl, it offers a rich and immersive listening experience for both longtime fans and new listeners. 25TH ANNIVERSARY REISSUE: First-time vinyl release celebrating this iconic debut album. ICONIC ROCK HITS: Includes chart-topping tracks like “My Own Prison,” “Torn,” and “What’s This Life For.” VINYL AUDIO EXPERIENCE: Delivers deep, warm sound for enhanced listening. POST-GRUNGE CLASSIC: Showcases Creed’s signature powerful and melodic rock style. COLLECTOR’S ITEM: Essential for fans of ‘90s rock and vinyl enthusiasts. HIGH-QUALITY PRESSING: Designed for durability and consistent playback. STANDARD LP FORMAT: Compatible with most turntables.

Category
Media > Music & Sound Recordings > Records & LPs
GTIN
888072441194
MPN
CRAFTRECORDINGS-888072441194-GENTLYUSED

Specifications

Debut album from Creed, featuring four Billboard #1 singles.

Material
Vinyl
Gender
unisex
Age Group
adult
Condition
used
Category
Media > Music & Sound Recordings > Records & LPs

Additional Attributes

  • debut album
  • hard rock
  • four Billboard Hot Mainstream Rock #1 singles
  • multi-platinum selling album

Image Analysis

3 images
Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl product image (primary)
01high

Album cover style image of a shirtless man crouched in a corner against a wooden wall with the text 'CREED' and 'my own prison' at the top.

OCR: CREED my own prison
shirtless crouching manblue denim jeansblack bootswooden wallcornerdirt or straw on floorhigh contrast lightingsepia color gradinglarge uppercase wordmark text at topsmall lowercase subtitle text under title
Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl product image 2
02medium

Album back cover showing a combination padlock attached to a rusted metal door with peeling paint, a sepia inset photo of musicians in the upper right, and a centered text block with track list and production credits.

OCR: Creed Is: Scott Stapp Lead Vocals. Brian Marshall Bass. Scott Phillips Drums. Mark Tremonti Guitar, Vocals. Side A 1. Torn 2. Ode 3. My Own Prison 4. Pity For A Dime 5. In America. Side B 1. Illusion 2. Unforgiven 3. Sister 4. What's This Life For 5. One. Produced by John Kurzweg. Mixed by Ron Saint-Germain
combination padlockrusted metal door surfacepeeling paintmetal hingerivetsdistressed texturesepia photographic inset of musicianscentered text block with track list and creditssmall barcode in lower leftsmall record label logo in lower rightstudio lighting highlight on inset photodark border framing image
Creed My Own Prison Reissued Vinyl product image 3
03high

Studio product shot of a vinyl record partially pulled from its square sleeve showing the album cover art of a crouching male figure and the record with visible center label and grooves.

OCR: CREED. my own prison
vinyl recordsquare record sleevealbum cover artworkmale figure crouchingbare upper torsolight colored jeanswork bootsdistressed wooden walldark textured backgroundrecord center labelrecord grooves visiblestudio product shotspot lightinghigh contrast

Brand PDP Lookup

Brand
Craft Recordings

Creed - My Own Prison (CD)

Also Seen Here

4 retailers

Documents & Data

Reddit Insights

4 threads · r/VinylReleases, r/grunge

Reddit users generally appreciate the album but express mixed to negative sentiment about the pressing quality of the reissued vinyl, citing noise and cheap packaging.

mixed sentiment95% match

Positive musically, but complaints about pressing noise, cheap inner sleeves, and some copies arriving damaged lower the overall sentiment.

Themes

Pressing qualitynegative
Album nostalgia and musical qualitypositive
Variant collectingmixed

Use Cases

  • Vinyl collecting and nostalgia
  • Music appreciation and discussion

Watch Out For

mediumPoor inner sleeve quality and noisy pressings

Community Q&A

How is the pressing quality of the 25th anniversary edition?
Mixed; many report surface noise, cheap inner sleeves, and lower volume, though some find it acceptable.

Compared To

vs Other Creed vinyl pressings (Human Clay, Greatest Hits)

The My Own Prison pressing is not as top-notch as the Human Clay or Greatest Hits pressings, with more noise.

Source Threads

  • Root beer variant announcement with pressing quality discussion

    Multiple users note pressing noise: 'Sounds like a campfire. Mastered very low.' and 'it's ok, couldve been mastered a bit better.i vacuumed mine before playing and its pretty quiet,but the inner is rubbish,thin cheap paper that will split in no time. better to have it than not though'.

    r/VinylReleasesView thread →

  • Walmart exclusive metallic silver variant with mixed feedback

    User reports: 'I've tried this press, and the Walmart Gray, and they are both noisy as hell. Sounds like a campfire. Mastered very low. This album deserves better.' Another adds: 'Got the black vinyl copy... It honestly sounds great. Not AS top-notch as their pressing of Human Clay or Greatest Hits, but it still sounds fantastic.'

    r/VinylReleasesView thread →

  • Appreciation post for the album's guitar work and nostalgia

    User says: 'I love this album. Mark Tremonti’s guitar work is really underrated.' Others discuss how the album holds up and share nostalgia for the late 90s era.

    r/grungeView thread →

  • Discussion on the album's legacy and whether it's grunge

    Comments include: 'It's a great debut. Not really grunge, but it has some post-grunge elements.' Some criticize the band's later work but praise this album.

    r/grungeView thread →