Should i sell my records




















There is no listing expiration. Offer shipping discounts to Buyers willing to purchase more than one record. Your inventory will be accessible to a robust community of genuinely passionate music fans!

Start Selling on Discogs. Discogs is a global community of music fans that have built the largest physical-media Database, which is the infrastructure of our thriving vinyl Marketplace.

Creating a Discogs account is free and allows you to buy and sell with fellow collectors around the world. If all this sounds great to you, then join us! Create an Account. As a Seller, you can tailor your account settings by entering shipping rates for different countries, adding your PayPal ID for simpler transactions, providing terms of service upfront, and more.

Not only will this make selling on Discogs easy, but it will also provide an excellent shopping experience. Optimize Your Seller Settings. Call Paul at Meanwhile, you're sitting there with a big pile of vinyl records on your living room floor. A few are even scattered on your dining room table so you can get a closer look. They all came from that big box you pulled out of your attic a few hours ago. Oh no! The dust is starting to rub into your carpet.

How are you even supposed to clean these vinyl records? Can you stack vinyl records like CDs? How should you organize vinyl records? Some are big, some are small. Some have bold, colorful artwork on the sleeves. Maybe you have a few that don't even have a "pocket". You think to yourself. How do I know how much my vinyl records are worth? How can I find out the price of these old, vinyl records?

Selling A Phone? Tags: Selling Guides , Vinyl Records. Share This Post. Recent Posts. How to Identify Your Google Pixel. You need to do some research to determine exactly how much your vinyl records are worth. Here are some highly-valuable vinyl records.

Did You Know? I was immediately thrown out of the store. I'll likely end up doing a combination of donating to Goodwill and trying to find a CD recycler to take the bulk of my music, so as not to pollute the environment with plastic. Before I ship this music out the door, the question remains whether I want to go to the trouble of converting this music to MP3s and storing it on some sort of external hard drive.

The idea of repetitive ripping for days OK, weeks on end is completely unappealing, not to mention inefficient. More disturbing, after all this time in boxes, I haven't missed many of these records. When I have them in front of me, I'm more likely to give them a spin; otherwise, it's often out of sight, out of mind.

This mind-set is why I get frustrated by the lack of deep discovery options on many streaming services. I like finding buried treasure, as it were, rediscovering dusty gems that catapult a record back into my listening rotation.

That's the advantage of brick-and-mortar record stores, and of having such a huge collection--you never know what you're going to find. At the same time, it's just as appealing about having all of your music available in one cloud-based location. There's something delightfully economical and clean about having instant access to an entire collection, scrolling through a tidy array of band names and albums to choose just the right song for a particular mood.

Of course, even this scenario isn't perfect: In me, this often creates what academics call "the anxiety of choice," when too many options leads to decision paralysis. Instead of finding the perfect song, I settle on no music at all. Call it the equivalent of having cable channels and yet there's "nothing on.

How can I not find the perfect thing to cue up?



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