anyone now how much Now 1 on vinyl is worth??
i have a copy sitting on my book shelf collecting dust
Not a lot. I tried one on eBay last year, didn't shift.
anyone now how much Now 1 on vinyl is worth??
i have a copy sitting on my book shelf collecting dust
Dude, you either mean Wax factor on Trafalgar Street or the Record Shop which is the soundtrack specialist on Terminus Road
Why not try looking your vinyl up on ebay. Check what other people are selling similar stuff for. If there are 50 copies for sale for 1p a time then it's a pretty good bet it's not worth much. If you see a record that you have that's creating a bit of interest then put a watch on it and follow it to the end of the auction. Might take a bit of time but less than listing it all unnecessarily. A bit of fun as well.
Beanos on Croydon are pretty much THE vinyl retailer in the UK, their website might give you some indications.
I recently sold up my vinyl.
600 albums played only on Linn Sondek (with some rare ones worth £30-50s according to the books). After being looked at by many buyers both private and professional I finally got £200 for the lot.
Similarly 1200 singles from 60's onward (many worth £3-5 according to the books) reached the grand total of £74 on E bay.
Lesson one, is stop dreaming about big profits. Vinyl is all but dead and most collectors already have all they want. Vinyl sales at markets are woeful as everyone wants the 'result' for 10p.
Collectors are numerous, and when you see some records increasing in value better than houses, you have to know that the market is alive and tangible as a big hobby for many people.
That The HIGH NUMBERS before they were called The WHO, went for over £1,100, is Roger paltry when you compare that with rare stamps fetching £800,000 for a tiny square of paper!
Record collecting has a long way to go to get to the status of many other hobbies, and I'd seriously prefer to have an original rock rarity than a cigarette card, baseball rookie-card, a stamp, or a coin. None of those can be played to produce a sound, the most you can do is look at them.
I will reinforce the statement that there is no long term value in buying vinyl.
Look at previous music formats right back to the pianola music roll
As technology changes there becomes less and less of a demand for the older formats and prices drop off dramatically.
So anyone investing in vinyl will be bitterly disappointed in the long term. Nobody got rich buying up old 78s.
CDs will not outlast vinyl for longevity, nor will they appeal to collectors in quite the same way.
Find out where there's a vinyl collectors fair near you. Make a list of what you have to sell, take it to the fair and find a stall that's selling similar stuff to what you have. Show the stall-holder your list and watch his eyes light up.
I did just that a could of years ago and got €1,000 for 250 albums. Fair return on a couple of hours' work I thought.