Vinyl prices has reached its breaking point IMO
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Loujoe said:I always regret selling anything. Never once said ,why did I keep this?0
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Loujoe said:I always regret selling anything. Never once said ,why did I keep this?Haha I'm the same way. At some point I'm going to have more of a storage issue, and I've only got so many hours a week to spin a record, but I love collecting and listening to them. It never occurs to me sell them. I've had a few duplicates I've given to a friend that also collection, and sometimes he returns the favour. I think I would regret losing something out of the collection more than I do having bought it.I think a lot of is I've been collecting since the 90s. New releases were hard to find, so it was either the odd new release or discounted classic rock albums. These last 10 years I've felt like a kid in a candy store with how much stuff gets pressed and how I've been able to buy lots of records I couldn't find back in the day.0
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Loujoe said:I always regret selling anything. Never once said ,why did I keep this?
When CDs came out, for some dumb reason I fell for the whole deal and sold off a bunch of my records. I can't tell you how many times I said to myself, "Why did I sell that?" Over the last 20 years or so, I've re-purchased many of those I regretted selling. Only a few remain to be brought back into the fold (so to speak)- things I originally paid six or eight bucks for new, and of course, they are now outrageously expensive now.
Post edited by brianlux on"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
I'm definitely a lot more selective with my vinyl purchases these days. A lot of that is down to the price of vinyl, but also shipping costs to Australia are crazy.
There are only a handful of artists that I buy every release on vinyl (Neil, PJ, Mark Lanegan, Lou Barlow/Sebadoh, maybe 1 or 2 others). 10 or 15 years ago I might have been chasing down every limited release or side project (and been really annoyed if I missed out) but those days are long gone.
There will be the odd occasion where I go looking for a specific record, but usually only if I already love the album and want to be able to spin it, otherwise I'll go for digital.“Do not postpone happiness”
(Jeff Tweedy, Sydney 2007)
“Put yer good money on the sunrise”
(Tim Rogers)0 -
Tim Simmons said:Great time to start selling off a collection.
Bridge Benefit 1994, San Francisco 1995, San Diego 1995 1 & 2, Missoula 1998, Los Angeles 2000, San Diego 2000, Eddie Vedder/Beck 2/26/2002, Santa Barbara 2003, Irvine 2003, San Diego 2003, Vancouver 2005, Gorge 2005, San Diego 2006, Los Angeles 2006 1 & 2, Santa Barbara 2006, Eddie Vedder 4/10/08, Eddie Vedder 4/12/08, Eddie Vedder 4/15/08, 7/12/2008, SF 8/28/09, LA 9/30/09, LA 10/1/09, LA 10/06/09, LA 10/07/09, San Diego 10/09/09, Eddie Vedder 7/6/2011, Eddie Vedder 7/8/2011, PJ20 9/3/2011, PJ20 9/4/2011, Vancouver 9/25/2011, San Diego 11/21/13, LA 11/24/13, Ohana 9/25/21, Ohana 9/26/21, Ohana 10/1/21, EV 2/17/22, LA Forum 5/6/22, LA Forum 5/7/22, EV 10/1/22, EV 9/30/230 -
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I started collecting properly around late nineties by buying stuff that was vinyl only and then around the early 2000s it was really fun to collect records. It wasn't an overly popular past time. Could find stuff at record fairs and new albums at reasonable prices. I was never really into proper vintage vinyl, I had a few Beatles, Stones, Dylan, Springsteen, Neil Young records and a lot of Clash records.
It was exciting buying a record and there wasn't new stuff out every week I wanted but now it's so marketed. I feel tricked into wanting things I don't really want to buy. Almost every time I purchase something now I just feel annoyed at the cost and it ruins the experience. I don't believe the values on discogs but even the lowest value of my collection is pretty eye watering for me. I look at all this "stuff" and think how am I ever going to get rid of it. The effort alone will be monumental. 20+ years of collecting. My kids show no interest. Ive told myself if I ever lose my job I'm just going to take some time and sell all of this. I'm pretty sure though one day I'll have had enough and just donate the whole lot to charity.
Ultimately at the moment I just need to be more disciplined and more selective. I can't just stop overnight.0 -
I’m about done now too. I only buy albums I really love or releases from a select few artists.'F*** the pessimists. F*** 'em.' Eddie Vedder0
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About 6 months ago I was in a store and the y had some albums that I was looking through and came across KISS' Destroyer. I have been wanting a new copy of it but the price was $50.
No thanks. I put it right back.0 -
tempo_n_groove said:About 6 months ago I was in a store and the y had some albums that I was looking through and came across KISS' Destroyer. I have been wanting a new copy of it but the price was $50.
No thanks. I put it right back."Mostly I think that people react sensitively because they know you’ve got a point"0 -
Spiritual_Chaos said:tempo_n_groove said:About 6 months ago I was in a store and the y had some albums that I was looking through and came across KISS' Destroyer. I have been wanting a new copy of it but the price was $50.
No thanks. I put it right back.0 -
FR181798 said:I started collecting properly around late nineties by buying stuff that was vinyl only and then around the early 2000s it was really fun to collect records. It wasn't an overly popular past time. Could find stuff at record fairs and new albums at reasonable prices. I was never really into proper vintage vinyl, I had a few Beatles, Stones, Dylan, Springsteen, Neil Young records and a lot of Clash records.
It was exciting buying a record and there wasn't new stuff out every week I wanted but now it's so marketed. I feel tricked into wanting things I don't really want to buy. Almost every time I purchase something now I just feel annoyed at the cost and it ruins the experience. I don't believe the values on discogs but even the lowest value of my collection is pretty eye watering for me. I look at all this "stuff" and think how am I ever going to get rid of it. The effort alone will be monumental. 20+ years of collecting. My kids show no interest. Ive told myself if I ever lose my job I'm just going to take some time and sell all of this. I'm pretty sure though one day I'll have had enough and just donate the whole lot to charity.
Ultimately at the moment I just need to be more disciplined and more selective. I can't just stop overnight.
Then I moved overseas and didn’t take my records so I had a 9 year gap. Moved back a few years ago and started again and everything had changed. It’s like when rip van winkle took a nap and woke up years later
not sure the sheer volume of choices now is necessarily for the better. It is nice that current music is now on vinyl as that wasn’t the case in the 2000’s, but it’s so hit and miss with quality it’s probably harder today as it’s way easier to spend a lot more money on something that sounds indistinguishable from the cd0 -
PJ_Soul said:HughFreakingDillon said:I've finally been priced out. I might even start selling some off. I really liked the idea of it; but I just don't sit and listen to music at home as much as I wished I could, or as I used to be able to. I'm about 95% digital listening now. It is what it is.
I think I'm going to go back to my original intention; only buy vinyl that is only available on that format. Everything else is digital and possibly some cd's.
You might regret a sell off once your kids are older and you have more time on your hands to spin them!
My dad recently lent me his Beatles vinyl collection, and it got me so fired up to that band that I never really found before just listening to them on digital. it's just different. But I have a very small house, a limited budget, etc etc. If I'm not priced out, I'm definitely "roomed" out already. lolBy The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0 -
FR181798 said:I started collecting properly around late nineties by buying stuff that was vinyl only and then around the early 2000s it was really fun to collect records. It wasn't an overly popular past time. Could find stuff at record fairs and new albums at reasonable prices. I was never really into proper vintage vinyl, I had a few Beatles, Stones, Dylan, Springsteen, Neil Young records and a lot of Clash records.
It was exciting buying a record and there wasn't new stuff out every week I wanted but now it's so marketed. I feel tricked into wanting things I don't really want to buy. Almost every time I purchase something now I just feel annoyed at the cost and it ruins the experience. I don't believe the values on discogs but even the lowest value of my collection is pretty eye watering for me. I look at all this "stuff" and think how am I ever going to get rid of it. The effort alone will be monumental. 20+ years of collecting. My kids show no interest. Ive told myself if I ever lose my job I'm just going to take some time and sell all of this. I'm pretty sure though one day I'll have had enough and just donate the whole lot to charity.
Ultimately at the moment I just need to be more disciplined and more selective. I can't just stop overnight.
"Vintage vinyl", FR? You're making me feel old!
"It's a sad and beautiful world"-Roberto Benigni0 -
Three records purchased yesterday. 2 new and 1 used. $87. I’m out for sure.0
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brianlux said:
"Vintage vinyl", FR? You're making me feel old!
You know what I mean though right.
I always thought that old stuff would always be in the racks of used record stores, it wasn't going anywhere and so I concentrated on getting new releases, White Stripes, PJ etc that were truly limited then.
I feel old when I look back to the 90s, the whole punk era of the Clash etc was closer to that time than the 90s are to now.
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You can chose 20 records to keep and have to get rid of the rest and get no money for them. How do you pick that 20?
Favourite records.
Most valuable.
Most limited.
Sentimental.0 -
I knew eventually somebody would defend themselves (without provocation) that they didn’t get into vinyl because it was cool or retro. Lol0
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1ThoughtKnown said:I knew eventually somebody would defend themselves (without provocation) that they didn’t get into vinyl because it was cool or retro. LolBy The Time They Figure Out What Went Wrong, We'll Be Sitting On A Beach, Earning Twenty Percent.0
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1ThoughtKnown said:I knew eventually somebody would defend themselves (without provocation) that they didn’t get into vinyl because it was cool or retro. Lol
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