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Record Collector

Record Collector is a British monthly music magazine focussing on rare and collectable records, and the bands who recorded them. It was founded in Sept 1979 and distributes worldwide.[1] It is promoted as "the world’s leading authority on rare and collectable records" and claims to be currently "the UK’s longest-running music magazine".[2]

This article is about the magazine. For the hobby, see Record collecting.

Editor

Music magazine

Four-weekly

March 1980

United Kingdom

London

English

History[edit]

Music journalist and publisher Sean O'Mahony, under the pen name Johnny Dean, had published an official Beatles magazine, The Beatles Book (also known as Beatles Monthly), from 1963 to 1969.[1][3] In May 1976 O'Mahony started reprinting it, enclosing it in eight pages of new information about the Beatles along with small ads, in a magazine he named The Beatles Book Appreciation Society Magazine.[4][5] The interest shown in the small ads of The Beatles Book Appreciation Society Magazine for records and memorabilia of bands other than the Beatles led O'Mahony to launch Record Collector in Sept 1979, along with a copy of the 41st issue of Beatles Monthly.[1] With issue 7, in March 1980, the Beatles Monthly section was separated from Record Collector and continued to be sold independently.[1][6]


By June 1980, Record Collector was a glossy A5 publication which ran to no more than 100 pages. With the addition of another editorial staff member – Peter Doggett, who stayed with the magazine for almost 20 years – Record Collector began to take shape and assume its own identity. Aimed at the collectors' market, early issues focused largely on the music of collectable artists from the 1950s, 1960s and 1970s.


Uniquely, Record Collector features consisted of both prose pieces on the history of the artist, and detailed discographies of their UK releases. These discographies would provide all the information needed for collectors to pore over, and which enabled them to differentiate between different pressings of supposedly identical releases – catalogue numbers, release dates and distinguishing features of the records and sleeves themselves. In particular, they would also include a valuation of each record, so that dealers and collectors had a springboard to work from.


Collectors outside London found themselves limited by their situation. The mail order listings in Record Collector were important, and one of the few places for buyers and sellers to make contact with each other. At its height, this section was up to half of the publication. However, at the turn of the 21st century with the success of selling to consumers on-line via sites such as eBay, many sellers now use this type of method and the amount of listings has greatly declined.


In 2003, Record Collector became a full colour publication – marking the fact with a psychedelic special – and printing 13 issues a year. The magazine was updated steadily by editor-In-chief Alan Lewis, former editor of Sounds, NME, Black Music, founding editor of Kerrang! and involved in the launches of both Uncut and Loaded.[7] Lewis left in April 2011 and was replaced by Ian McCann, formerly of NME, Black Echoes and The Independent. His debut came with an issue focused on "the 51 Best Investments in vinyl".[8] In 2017 McCann stepped down as editor and was succeeded by Paul Lester.[9]

Releases from the Republic Of Ireland, which were imported into Britain, but not officially issued.

'Export Releases' manufactured in the UK in the 1950s and 1960s, and distributed to countries that did not have their own pressing plants.

Records, flexidiscs, cassettes or CDs included as freebies with magazines, books or other records.

Promotional releases, demos, test pressings and acetate recordings where they have been made available to the public, contain unique material and/or packaging, or are so important/well known among collectors that they warrant inclusion.

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Official website

R.C's Rare Record Price Guide

Worldwide Record Collector Fair Organizers