record sale[s] on discogs

Woebot

Well-known member
of course these days im in the room myself the whole fucking time so they'd have to kill me as well (do me a favour right? 🤪)
 

subvert47

I don't fight, I run away
selling must be annoying. dealing with people whingeing about whether something is VG or G+ :rolleyes:

Not really. Anyone who buys at VG or G+ doesn't give a shit about quality. Both grades are equivalent to "sounds like crap".
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
I don't think I'd be worried about someone stealing my records, more concerned about fire etc though maybe if there was a fire they would be the least of my worries.
 

yyaldrin

in je ogen waait de wind
hm too bad, i'm reading in the comments that people are speculating whether he bought it himself. it's probably a shit song anyway.
 

boxedjoy

Well-known member
there are plenty of cheap gems for under £5 on Discogs and eBay. Nearly every r&b hit 1998-2001 came with a garage remix on the CD single and it's my preferred format as you can rip it to mp3 easily.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
I find it frustrating to buy something really cheap and then pay the postage which doubles the price. But there's no way around that of course.
 

Leo

Well-known member
Is it insured though?

I'm interested to know what type of shipping insurance is put on a $41k record purchase. I wouldn't trust the US Postal Service to deliver it, even FedEx and UPS are a risk. Hell, if you've made $41k on the sale of a record, buy a plane ticket and hand-delver it yourself.
 

RWY

Well-known member
I find it frustrating to buy something really cheap and then pay the postage which doubles the price. But there's no way around that of course.
Regularly add cheap records to your wantlist, keep an eye on the sellers who usually stock the genres of the records in question, then when over five of them (or whatever number brings the postage per record down to an acceptable level) appear for sale at once from a single buyer, click buy.
 

john eden

male pale and stale
that's a mighty amount john.

did you have to make any new entries? i think it's pretty astonishing that so far EVERYTHING has been in there - and the time and effort it takes to make these entries - listing the engineer and the tea boy and the matrix numbers and the... etc... it's a truly remarkable labour of love. i don't think the people who own discogs can possibly have a proper appreciation of the immensity of that database. by rights it shouldn't be owned by anyone...

in theory it's quite reassuring having a list - if the house burns down, the argument goes, then one has a record of what one actually owned.
It is an incredible resource.

I've added a few releases over the years (mainly ragga sevens which were generally under represented I think). But mainly most things are on there, it's true. Occasionally there will be a precise variant of a release I have which isn't on there but I am not too fussed about that.

Tweaking discogs entries can be quite therapeutic when you are playing a few tunes although it is very nerdy of course.

@IdleRich My records aren't insured except under the general contents insurance. To be honest if the flat burnt down I don't think I'd bother starting up a record collection again.
 

john eden

male pale and stale
there are plenty of cheap gems for under £5 on Discogs and eBay. Nearly every r&b hit 1998-2001 came with a garage remix on the CD single and it's my preferred format as you can rip it to mp3 easily.
Yeah I just got a dancehall CD for £2 on ebay with free postage.

I'm sure that obscures awful pay and conditions for the workers let alone the environment but you can get stuff like that for peanuts still.
 

IdleRich

IdleRich
It is an incredible resource.

I've added a few releases over the years (mainly ragga sevens which were generally under represented I think). But mainly most things are on there, it's true. Occasionally there will be a precise variant of a release I have which isn't on there but I am not too fussed about that.

Tweaking discogs entries can be quite therapeutic when you are playing a few tunes although it is very nerdy of course.

@IdleRich My records aren't insured except under the general contents insurance. To be honest if the flat burnt down I don't think I'd bother starting up a record collection again.
There is a definite question of priorities there.... but just as an academic exercise or whatever, I know people who've tried to insure their records and it's very difficult to get a proper valuation and so on. I guess really they would need to check which issue of every thing and its condition and so on. And seeing as no two people agree on the value of any record gonna be a nightmare.
 

boxedjoy

Well-known member
Yeah I just got a dancehall CD for £2 on ebay with free postage.

I'm sure that obscures awful pay and conditions for the workers let alone the environment but you can get stuff like that for peanuts still.
I suppose it depends who is selling. I got a tenner's worth of 50p singles from one guy a few weeks ago who was clearly just an adult having a clear-out, but yeah you do wonder about these businesses that exist on these sites alone.
 

chava

Well-known member
According to discogs my collection of 25 years is worth more or less exactly what I gave for them (judging by median price). I guess that's an ok investment. Especially considering my bad habit of selling lots of records by iconic house and techno producers from the 80-90s and obv those records are fetching crazy amounts now esp compared to all the kitchy, "off" records I kept which you can get for 1 euro now.
 
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