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somethingvinyl

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Everything posted by somethingvinyl

  1. A lot are considered first pressings. I don't remember why, but the club pressings were usually from the first run.
  2. I've been selling records on the side at record shows for nearly a decade. I started with a couple boxes, a couple crates and a box for 45's and now take two, eight foot tables worth (1K+ LP's & 45's) to shows I can reasonable drive to and home from same day. I do between 4-6 shows a year all over the Gulf South. Here are some tips: Just get small Uhaul boxes. They're a $1 each, they stack well, and carry less awkwardly than anything else I've hauled. After a few uses, they do get worn down. But then you can easily and cheaply replace. Just get your own Square reader. If there's not enough time, borrow one. But Square will give them to you for free just using their service. Check their fees, but it's reasonable. I think when I did $840 in just cards one time, it worked the fees out to around $20. Or get some comparable reader like Paypal. But make a sign that you accept credit cards. Even at festivals, people forget just how readily unavailable ATM's are. If you're one of the vendors who takes credit cards, you'll sell more. I promise. I resisted for so long but it just makes sense. People usually want to buy, so give them a reason to charge something. I divide my boxes by genre. I don't have enough enough space or records of one genre to really get sub genre specific. So, there's a couple punk/metal/ska/indie boxes. There's a jazz box. There's five rock/pop/folk/country/electronic/rap boxes. There's a couple soul/blues/gospel/reggae boxes. There's a soundtrack/spoken word/comedy box. I obsessively alphabetize to help people (and myself) locate things easily. Plus, I know immediately if I have something or not because I've wiped, cleaned, bagged, listened to, researched and priced every goddamn record I have. It's easier than you think to keep track of stuff. There's maybe two records in my nearly ten years that passed through my hands that I'm not sure if I sold or they got stolen. As you get addicted to this, buy a dolly. You can stack three of those Uhaul boxes up safely to load in and out. Saves on the back. I live on the second floor of my apartment. I dread making fifteen trips down to load and vice versa. Just buy little white labels at Wal-Mart. Stuff that needs to be bagged you can write a blurb and price. If it's cheap, don't worry that the price tag is on the sleeve. I always try to set up closest to the entrance. I want to be the first records people are looking at. Sometimes this isn't possible. But if there is a first come, first pick table policy, I'd get there super early. When other vendors start breaking down tables, I keep mine up until the organizers say it's time to go. I've sold a ton sticking around until the very end. Make up business cards. If you sell on discogs, just have that address, your email, other contact info on the card. People often want to buy records, so be their guy. Not everybody is as resourceful as we are. But people on occasion are also looking to sell collections sometimes. I've never actually gotten a call this way, but I need more records to buy like I need a hole in my head. If you want to do this more regularly, you got to let people know you're the guy who buys records. I literally just bought 1,100 LP's off Craig's List. If you advertise that you're buying, people will get into contact with you. It helps if you're one of the only people in town doing this. I have a real job and there's tons of people here. But sometimes you get lucky. This was in the collection I bought, which is part of the reason I forked over the dough: https://www.discogs.com/The-Southern-University-Jazz-Ensemble-Live-At-The-1971-American-College-Jazz-Festival/release/12158075 Good luck! Any other questions, just ask.
  3. Bump, but I finally got a RCM and I love it. It's an old ass Nitty Gritty but it's the best thing I've ever used (Not my pic).
  4. On meeting with the hitman, Red, and his arrest: Who is Tim to smear the good, goddamn name of a steroid dealer?
  5. I need another pressing of this like I need a hole in my head. But I'd like to hear some of the mixes online.
  6. You better keep that clear! Your friend didn't do a thoughtful thing, you did
  7. Yes, it is. It only goes so high. So now you know.
  8. Hey, thanks for the explanation! The TT/receiver I was playing this on initially is low budget so it only goes so loud, and that was my first and only criticism. It turned out great overall.
  9. Thanks to @pizza face for the hook up on an extra. Olive green sounds good. My only criticism of this pressing is that it sounds kind of quiet. I'm quite happy the artwork turned out so well.
  10. Pleasantly surprised at what I heard with "Redefined." Might pick up later, cheaply, secondhand.
  11. Preordered that Black Pumas LP. Mine shipped this week! Picked up this single by Brenton Wood. He was born in Shreveport, LA and eventually made his way south to NOLA. He was a LA soul singer who made it big, though, unlike many of the greats here. He had two national hits. Oogum Boogum and this:
  12. I agree, definitely. I like watching most of NXT.
  13. I wish I could get into wrestling like when I was a kid. But all of us being "smart" now sort of makes dirt sheets and inside stuff the most entertaining part of wrestling, which is sad, because we're supposed to be entertained by the action in the right not behind the curtain.
  14. That Super Showdown main event was so bad. Worth the watch for all the botches.
  15. As a kid with no cable in the 80's or 90's (we had a big satellite dish), I only watched syndication shows with occasionally getting to see Prime Time Wrestling or Raw live when on holiday breaks from school. During the late 90's, I watched WCW almost exclusively live (or VCR recorded it to watch the next day). I watched both in college but at that point in 1999/2000/2001 my friends and I never missed Raw. I think the only reason I really stopped watching was, again, having no cable. But by my mid 20's, it became boring. I don't know if it really was or if I was too old to be entertained by it. I would try to catch the big shows on PPV in my late 20's and early 30's, but it was pretty rare. The WWE Network has really helped pull me back in. But still, I'll rewatch their documentaries and original content before I sit through a whole episode of Raw/SD.
  16. ^ Nope. I downloaded Fite app finally and I'm watching all the Starrcast content from last year's event. I watched all the Youtube shows about Double or Nothing. Looks like a great show.
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