latest CD: Lindemann - Skills in Pills latest Vinyl: Hawkwind - A Space Ritual - to replace the old, no-longer playable copy from 1973
There are still some shops but you are unlikely to get too much dosh for them. Some that still buy are Disc Discovery (Spring Bank), the one in the indoor market near Hepworth Arcade entrance (Spin It) and a shop that has opened recently near Ye Olde White Harte which I don't have the name. Also Golden Oldie is still trading on Cottingham Road. Alternatively you could sell on 'internet, EBay (they'll greedily take 15-20% cut though) or Gumtree. If you want to find out how much your records could be worth, look at Popsyke site which gives end of sale prices. Must be at minimum in very good condition mind. Good luck!
Quite interesting looking on there, my Into The Valley on white vinyl wasn't worth as much as I thought, though Sheep Farming In The Falklands on flexidisk is apparently worth £32, I wonder where mine is. please log in to view this image
Thanks for all the replies and Popsike.com is excellent. I'm sitting on a few quid here all thanks to the previous owner of the house.
I want this as a piece of art, Japanese picture disc release of White Man In Hammersmith Palais, it only went for £70... please log in to view this image
Bear in mind valuations are massively dependent on condition. Look up Bird's Nest Records on Facebook (or PM me) - local dealer who may be interested in viewing what you have. Tell him Hull Music Archive sent you. If you've got any local stuff I'd be interested myself.
Buyers won't give you great prices because they know what their buying so condition, pressing...etc become ways of them knocking down the price, plus they have to make a profit on top so will never pay you what its worth. If you have the time I would take advantage of the current vinyl boom and list them on ebay, amazon marketplace and discogs people that know nothing about vinyl will happily pay the going rate on there.
The most expensive album ever sold on discogs was from the NYC Hardcore band Judge, it went for just over $6000. I remember reading a while ago that a Northen Soul single by Frank Wilson sold for £25,000 as well. It really doesn't matter what the genre is, its essentially how rare something is, the Judge album was one of 110 copies, I think the Frank Wilson one was limited to 250 copies. Anything that charted or was mass produced at the time will always have little value simply because there's so many copies available.
If you want to know the value of any records, look them up on discogs, it has practically everything listed.
Well, it varies sometimes, but just as a rule of thumb, if you bought vinyl LPs around 1995-1999, when they were largely being phased out for CDs and before the MP3 generation, they can shift for good money because there were less of them being pressed. For example - Nick Cave & The Bad Seeds - Boatman's Call Lp has sold around £120-140. I sold Neil Young's '- Sleeps With Angels LP last December for £62. As for the most collectable artists, well it has to be the item that makes the band collectable or valuable. If you have the Sex Pistols - God Save The Queen on A&M (withdrawn after the band was evicted from the label, but 200-300 copies slipped out) you are talking at anything from £7,500 upwards. Obscure punk, psychedelic or prog rock usually shifts well too.
It goes without saying that the best way to maximise what you have is to sell individually on EBay (or Discogs, if you're in no hurry). However getting rid quick means either flogging as a job lot or going to a dealer. The portrayal of dealers in the post above is a little generic and slightly unfair - many dealers are collectors themselves and will not rip you off - the one I mentioned above fits into this bracket and I can guarantee that as I know him personally. (I'm not him, nor am I a dealer, though I am a collector). Obviously you won't get as much as if you sold them all yourself but that's surely obvious. Depends whether u have the time and inclination. Make no mistake, condition is of VITAL importance so if you sell them yourself, make sure you grade them as accurately as you possibly can.
The top five most valuable records are apparently... 1. The Quarrymen, 'That'll Be The Day/In Spite Of All The Danger'. 1958 original. It's the only known copy of the pre-Beatles disc recorded at a local electrical shop by McCartney, Lennon and Harrison with drummer Colin Hanton and pianist John Duff Lowe. It's worth an estimated £100,000. 2. The Quarrymen, 'That'll Be The Day/In Spite Of All The Danger'. A 1981 private reproduction of the 1958 original, only 25 copies exist. Value: £10,000. 3. Sex Pistols, 'God Save The Queen/No Feelings'. This version of the band's 1977 single was withdrawn from sale, and only about 300 copies are believed to exist. Those still with brown envelope and press release are worth £8000, or £7500 without. 4. The Beatles, "White Album' double LP, 1968. Depending on the serial number, this first pressing could set you back as much as £7000. 5. Queen, 'Bohemian Rhapsody/I'm In Love With My Car', 7 Inch Single, 1978. This EMI in-house special edition of the single doubled as an invite to a company event, and so came with goodies including matches, pen, ticket, menu, outer card sleeve, scarf and EMI goblets in card box. Value: £5000. Top twenty - http://www.nme.com/photos/the-20-most-valuable-records-ever/170754#/photo/2#VibuDEVjeeHUV6cG.99 I think this is an English list, I've seen another American one with Elvis and the Velvet Underground on with a few $25,000 records.
Yeah it's not right, it doesn't have Frank Wilson on it for starters. The Quarrymen acetate is owned by Macca I think, so not really buy-able!
Apparently, the Quarrymen one is actually worth £200k now, though as it belongs to Macca, it's unlikely to be going anywhere (it seems that the bloke who owned it found out how valuable it was and flogged it to Macca in 1981, as his missus was so worried about being burgled, she refused to leave the house).
To be honest nobody knows what it's actually worth, it's pure speculation. Though "****loads" is undoubtedly fairly accurate.
This is that Amercian list... John Lennon and Yoko Ono's "Double Fantasy" album (1980) - $15,000 Acetate disk by the Quarrymen (1958) - $200,000 Beatles' "Yesterday and Today" album (1966) - $38,800 Bob Dylan's "The Freewheelin' Bob Dylan" album (1963) - $35,000 Frank Wilson's "Do I Love You?" (1965) - $30,000 Sex Pistols' "God Save the Queen" single (1977) - $25,000 Acetate LP by Velvet Underground and Nico (1966) - $25,000 Elvis Presley's "Stay Away, Joe" promotional album (1967) - $25,000 The Five Sharps' "Stormy Weather" 78-rpm single (1952) - $25,000 Elvis Presley's "Good Luck Charm" single (1962) - $24,000
Before anyone gets excited they're clearly not the regular editions in most cases (my copy of Double Fantasy cost £2 I think), they'll be rare oddities in some way.