NURSING
HOME SITE
- ADULT RETIREMENT COMMUNITIES SITE
Active
Baby Boomers
Baby
Boomer Music
Record Collecting Still Thriving in the Twenty-first Century
By Charles Essmeier
It
may surprise many to find that the hobby of record collecting, long
thought dead after the introduction of the compact disc, is still alive
and well. Granted, many music fans have long replaced their records
with CDs, but for many Baby Boomers and Generation X-ers, the hobby
of buying and collecting record albums and singles continues to be a
focal point in their lives.
Records
offer the tactile sense of a substantial product, unlike the CD. The
seven-inch, 45 RPM single often came with a picture sleeve that has
no equivalent among compact discs. The nostalgia of records draws many
back to their younger days. And records still sound great. A recent
check of the Bay auction site showed 959,857 records for sale. That’s
just under one million records!
These
records aren’t selling at garage-sale prices, either. At any given time,
there might be six thousand records by the Beatles for sale, some of
which have sold for up to $40,000. Elvis isn’t far behind; his first
five singles, issued on the small Memphis-based, Sun label, routinely
bring $2000 at auction in nice condition. Other artists, such as the
Rolling Stones, Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, James Brown, or Madonna have
issued records that not only command sky-high prices, but also draw
a lot of bids.
The
greatest interest in record collecting is in artists of the 1960’s and
1970’s, but newer bands, such as Nirvana, draw a lot of attention from
younger collectors. Nivrana’s first single, Love Buzz issued in 1988,
sells for up to $2000 and there are several other bands, such as the
Misfits, that have released numerous records that sell for more than
$1000. What do collectors do with these records? Some play them, some
frame them, some simply put them on the shelf. There are collectors
who only buy records that they intend to play and others that simply
want anything that was ever commercially released by the artist that
interests them. There is no pigeonholing a collector; they come in all
shapes and sizes. For them, finding a long-unavailable single that has
eluded them for years is like winning the lottery.
For
those who are interested, there are literally thousands of Websites
devoted to artists, records, and record collecting. There are well-known
magazines, like Goldmine , Discoveries, and in the UK, Record Collector.
Anyone who thinks they might be interested in collecting records has
more resources available to them than ever before. Twenty years ago,
people thought that records would be long forgotten by now. They couldn’t
have been more wrong.
©Copyright
2005 by Retro Marketing. Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing,
a firm that operates several retail Websites, including AluminumChristmasTrees.net,
a site devoted to vintage aluminum
Christmas trees and accessories, and RarePinkFloyd.com, a site devoted
to rare records, compact discs and memorabilia by the band Pink
Floyd.