Charity Shop Breaks

fishmongerfunkfishmongerfunk 4,154 Posts
edited April 2008 in Strut Central
...they still suckhow a donation of 200 deep purple and who records is news beats mefrom the BBC:http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/magazine/7350109.stmThe mystery of the rare vinylBy Bob ChaundyIt used to be the collector's dream - charity shops where ill-informed staff sold first editions and rare records for pennies. But one lucky Oxfam shop's handling of a major donation shows how things have changed.It was a quiet afternoon in the Oxfam Shop in Great Yarmouth in the autumn of 2005. Most days are quiet in Great Yarmouth out of season.This day, however, was to prove a rare exception. In walked a man, in his 50s, with boxes containing between two and three hundred vinyl records. You don't get the fantastic bargains you used to at Oxfam - we've got much cleverer at spotting valuable things before the dealers get themJenny NewtonOxfamHe explained that he had come up to Norfolk from London to clear the house of his brother who had lived locally but had just died. The man was too upset to go through his brother's record collection in detail and wanted Oxfam to take it off his hands. The shop duly obliged.Normally, with such a large donation, charity shops like to write to the donor to thank them formally for their gift. However, the man in question wouldn't give his name.There was wild speculation - later established to be totally unfounded - that part of John Peel's vast record collection had begun seeping into the open market. He'd died the previous year and lived nearby.The records were mainly of '60s and '70s rock - The Who, Stones, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Medicine Head, The Moody Blues and so on. Many were in mint condition.Rural backwaterThere is not much call for such fare in Yarmouth. It just so happened that a volunteer there, Jenny Newton, was about to take over as manager of the Oxfam shop in nearby Stowmarket.Stowmarket is a small, sleepy rural Suffolk backwater. Judging by comments on some of the websites devoted to it, its charity shops are better than its regular ones - and there are four in its main street. But the town's on the commuter route to London and has lots of people on dual incomes.Stowmarket OxfamThe Stowmarket branch attracted unusual musical donationsLocal record dealer Mark Copeland finds the area a rich source of material."A lot of professional people who bought records in the '60s and '70s moved to Suffolk from London and the south-east because it was cheap. Now many of them have replaced their old LPs with CDs."But Copeland finds fewer collectibles in charity shops these days. Things have changed.One of the reasons Newton took the new record collection with her to Stowmarket was because it had an internet connection, something that has stopped charity shops having their treasures carted off for nearly nothing by wily collectors."We had an internet connection here which Yarmouth didn't have", she said. "It meant we could research the value of certain of the records more quickly and efficiently. Few Oxfam shops did this then. In a way, we were trailblazing." I found out that some of the songs had alternative mixes. I sold it on eBay for ??160Terry CushionOxfam volunteerWhile she specialises mainly in books, Jenny Newton's partner and fellow volunteer, Terry Cushion, took it upon himself to look after the new record donation.Cushion has built up an enviable personal collection of 20th Century classical music and knows where to research rarity and value.Vinyl collectors are on the look out for all manner of features aside from the music itself. There are the first pressings or "white labels", textured sleeves, inserts, posters, signed copies, early stereo or rare mono recordings. In days gone by few charity shop staff would have been switched on to this.Cushion understood the importance of the matrix numbers cut on to the vinyl run-out at the end of the record. These can offer clues as to rarity. One record in the collection, by Mott the Hoople, caught his eye."I first noticed it didn't have any banding - that is the spaces you normally get between the tracks."Then I discovered it was what they call a 'mispressing', in that the tracks didn't correspond with what the sleeve said they should be. Later I found out that some of the songs had alternative mixes. I sold it on eBay for ??160."Theft problemUsing internet auction sites to sell rarer items has become the way of doing business for modern charity shops.In Stowmarket, only 2% of the records are sold online, but they provide 30% of the takings. The same goes for books. A first edition Dick Francis novel recently fetched ??700 after being advertised on the web."You don't get the fantastic bargains you used to at Oxfam," says Jenny Newton. "We've got much cleverer at spotting valuable things before the dealers get them and this batch of records got us going."If any record or book is suspected of having a rarity value, they're not put on show - theft is one of the biggest headaches, even in a charity shop.Stowmarket is a good example of how such a shop can raise its game.Roger DaltreyThe Who album fetched ??100"We like to give individual shop managers the autonomy to develop sales in the best way they can for their area," says Stuart Foulkes, from Oxfam head office."Stowmarket is a good example of how things have changed. We've been working with eBay for a number of years now, especially when we're donated unusual items such as overseas holidays, cars, even speedboats."Last year Oxfam became the first charity to launch an online shop, on which individual stores can upload photographs of unusual items for sale to a wider market.Though Oxfam's policy is to accept everything, the likes of Manuel and his Music of the Mountains or The James Last Orchestra are now consigned to the rubbish bin in Stowmarket.Nowadays, Oxfam's national bill for waste disposal for its 850 outlets exceeds ??1 million. The Stowmarket shop's improved quality merchandise has resulted in like attracting like.MagicIt recently received another gift of 200 rock discs from the 1970s that included an original issue of The Who's My Generation worth ??100. It currently has 500 LPs in the shop, with another 200 held back to be researched.These records, when sold, are now being enjoyed not only by the good burghers of Suffolk, but also by collectors all over the world.And while charity shops have become a little less magical for those same collectors, the good causes are benefiting from an increase in knowledge.

  Comments


  • skelskel You can't cheat karma 5,033 Posts
    there's still value in checking out the charity shops that are run SOLELY by little old ladies.
    Anyone younger than 50 behind that counter and I generally don't go back again.

    I would dearly love to sift through John Peel cast-offs though....

  • DongerDonger 854 Posts


    I would dearly love to sift through John Peel cast-offs though....

    "There was wild speculation - later established to be totally unfounded - that part of John Peel's vast record collection had begun seeping into the open market. He'd died the previous year and lived nearby"

    I would imagine that someone, a close friend or something would be keeping a lot of it, and if some of it is being sold off, it would be to record shops and collectors, and some e-bay.

  • DuderonomyDuderonomy Haut de la Garenne 7,794 Posts

    Hasn't Peel's son gone into the DJing business?

    He'll wanna keep the lot.
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