Are old classical LPs worth anything?

If you started buying vinyl records in the mid 1970’s then it is most likely that there is nothing in your collection that has any great value. If you started buying vinyl records in the 1950’s & 1960’s, however, then you may have a few or indeed many valuable records that are of interest to collectors worldwide.

What LPs are worth the most money?

The 10 most expensive vinyl records ever sold

  • The Beatles: Yesterday & Today – $125,000.
  • John Lennon & Yoko Ono: Double Fantasy – $150,000.
  • The Beatles: Sgt.
  • Elvis Presley: ‘My Happiness’ – $300,000.
  • The Beatles: The Beatles (White Album) – $790,000.
  • Wu-Tang Clan: Once Upon a Time in Shaolin – $2 million.

How much are classic vinyl records worth?

The average eBay selling price for vinyl records is around $15, though vinyl record values vary significantly: from 50 cents to $50 or more. You need to do some research to determine exactly how much your vinyl records are worth. Here are some highly-valuable vinyl records.

What is the rarest album ever?

In 2015, White Album No. 000001, which had been kept in good condition by Ringo Starr for nearly 50 years, was sold at auction for $790,000. This first copy of the White Album is the most valuable and rarest vinyl record ever in the world.

What kind of vinyl is best for classical music?

Vintage classical vinyl records are prized by collectors for their warm sound quality compared to digital as well as the fact that many rare or out-of-print titles are only available in LP format. There’s an extremely wide range of desirable record titles available to classical-music fans,…

What are the most popular classical music records?

Some of the most popular classical records on the market include Leonid Kogan’s Beethoven Concerto, released in the United Kingdom by Columbia, Enrico Mainardi’s performances of Bach’s Cellosuites on Deutsche Grammophon, and Rossini’s Sonate a Quattro with Salvatore Accardo on the violin, released by Philips.

What kind of music was on 78 rpm records?

These early classical records spun at 78 rpm and mostly featured European classical music, which was popular in the United States at the time. By the 1930s, with the advent and widespread popularity of radios, these 78 records were no longer sufficient to capture live-music transmissions, which lasted longer than any single disc could hold.

When did classical music go out of style?

Classical music’s struggles continued into the early days of the compact disc, the late 70s and early 80s. Many of the major labels spent heavily to produce a lot of recordings that are widely regarded today as junk, while small retailers were replaced by oversized, and understaffed, record stores.