
Fig. 1
Fig. 2
Reissues are always controversial in vinyl-collecting circles. The true purist never buys reissued records (or such is the rhetoric). But of course, unless you've got a nearly unlimited budget, there are some records you simply won't be able to own without compromising your principles a little. So, where do you draw the line?
When I first started making a serious effort to collect vinyl - about six years ago, when I was 18 - I happened across this Sun Ra LP [Fig. 1] for $10. I knew enough to know that this is a relatively obscure LP that is very difficult indeed to find, but I didn't know that such records were available as reissues. I quickly put two and two together, but I bought the record anyway - it's a classic.
I didn't think any more of it until I showed the record to a friend, who's very much a purist. He scoffed - he'd never buy a reissue, much less a brand new, sealed reissue like the one I had. For some reason, the new, sealed reissue is at the bottom of the totem pole. Let it get beat up and scratched a little, sell it for half the price, and it's suddenly OK. Don't ask me why.
Anyway, I was crushed. For months, I avoided sealed reissues like the plague, though I still bought used reissues from the 70s and 80s. Every time I came across a sealed reissue, I thought about this exchange. Eventually I came to the conclusion that it made very little sense. I was limiting the scope of my music library for no reason. So, I began buying sealed reissues in certain cases.
Each collector has slightly different rules on this matter. Here are mine:
The bottom line is that I try not to buy reissues when an original isn't totally out of my price range. Part of the mystique of the LP is its individual history: if you buy a used record, you can think about all the hands it passed through to get to you. I'll pay a little more for that special feeling.
You'll often find a used reissue from 10 or 20 years ago, or whatever, that's less than a new, sealed reissue. I always buy these if I can't afford the original. I'm more interested in the mystique of the used record than I am in the shiny new cover of a sealed copy.
UPDATE
Two more important considerations (thanks Dennis):
Of course, sometimes you'll find a drastically undervalued original in a thrift store and get your hands on a real gem that you couldn't afford otherwise. So, do your homework, and keep on digging!
Cross-posted from ListenInMusic.com.
Read more articles in the "Diggin' the Crates" series.
© 2008 Evan Mix for Listen In. Some rights reserved.
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