Vinyl that is impossible to find


Our Time In Eden 10,000 Maniacs

And yours?

 

 

klimt

The Strawbs. Strawberry Music Sampler No.1

1969 publicity limited edition promo album at the time and 99 pressed. Only two copies have surfaced since that time.

The Strawbs first commercial album was produced by Tony Visconti. The tracks for their proposed first album on A&M had dialogue links between the songs, but the concept was dropped when another group released an album using the same idea. Various CDs were released in the 2000s.

Update

I see another has surfaced and sold in 2021. I have met Dave Cousins many times and talked about this LP. At the time of The Strawbs article in Record Collector only two copies were known to survive, so now the total is 3. This one sold for £2,500 on Discogs.

Jesus. About a year or two ago there were several copies at my local Barnes and Noble. Knowing that they were essentially the cd version on vinyl, I passed them up. Sheesh. 

Prices for vinyl nowadays are just like the prices for older gear that was pure junk 40 years ago -- sellers on Facebook and EBay slap the word "vintage" on it and think that is worth an extra 80% to the price.

 

I keep hoping I live long enough to see the scalpers end up sitting on thousands of Vinyl releases that they can't sell because buyers wise up and quit paying $50 to $100 for a crappy sounding vinyl album from the 1990's or 2000's that was pressed from a CD source.  How I wish I had a time machine...I had the opportunity to buy out the inventory of several independent used record stores in college town in the 1980's and 1990's.  No telling what gems I could have found.  Live and learn.

I have been buying obscure (and sometimes very desirable) records for years. Short of the FMU show in NY and one year at the Austin record show (still have not made it to the famous show in the Netherlands), almost never find this stuff in record bins. Discogs usually, sometimes, private sites of dealers. Condition is key, and grading these days is loose. I find certain vendors who I will tap into til the vein runs dry or their prices get nuts. There are different vendors who specialize in different genres- for some years, I was buying up OGs of spiritual jazz until that got to be crazy money, especially for the private label stuff. Ditto on the OG Vertigo Swirls, particularly from the UK. The market is still high despite general economy depending on what you are looking for. I've slowed way down in buying b/c of this- and some of the records were simply hard to find- e.g. the OG of Alice Coltrane's Ptah had not been reissued after 1974 until a recent reissue pulled from a digital master. It took me a few years back when to find a clean original though it wasn't "rare" as such- an Impulse release. 

Best approach is dialog with seller unless you know them. Get a sense of what they know, what their standards are, right to return (I hate returning records and explain that). We are talking about some records that now sell in the 4 figures, but I bought them before they hit those prices. Good luck, the hunt is part of the fun. 

I find myself in these situations sometimes, when there's a particular album I want on vinyl but finding a near mint / good+ rated copy on vinyl that isn't absurdly priced because it's out of print, I often look for the first issue CD copy.  For example, the first pressing of Seal's debut album on vinyl can run up to $90 if it's the UK pressing before it was remastered. But the CD version can be had for $10!  I have some albums on CD only because they were released only on CD and decades later are now being reissued on vinyl for $30+. I'm not sure if you entertain the CD listening side of things as far as your collecting goes but I've found them to be an affordable option.