Attention!!! I know this is a very expensive Price for the record. This i one of my most beloved Records, so my primary intention isn't the selling. I like it in my collection. I only will sell it, if someone wants it that much, that he is willing to pay that much money. Therefore the unrealistic price. Please don't tell me about it. I don't want to cheat ,I don't force someone into buying it, I don't want to drive up the price.Thanks for understanding
Isn't using Popsike on your smart phone in a chazza bit like using a laser guided rifle on a rabbit?
Half the fun of digging is getting home and realising you've just bought a pile of crap. I now use the the same method of satisfying my consumer urges in chazzas as on Amazon.
Amazon - go on a spree and fill your basket. Empty your basket.
Chazza - pull out all the records that tempt you...look at them, put them back.
Pretty much how I feel about it, 'cept I have used a phone/written things down when interesting records have been expensive. When they're cheap I buy pretty much anything. I've banged on about phones because I'm not sure it's ethically/David Essexly right to criticise people using technology in sensible/reasonable ways. It is irritating, but it isn't heinous.
Since bagging a smartphone: I often succumb to this tendency.
There are certain things which feel right and are definite impulse buys. Conversely, if chazzaland / record fairs were universally cheap I'd buy buy buy, but it isn't and my ropey finances are inclined to make me a little risk averse at a certain level.
Identifying something then looking it up is a (partial) test of digging 'intuition' - there's too much chuff out there to sift. It's hardly shooting fish in a barrel when, as we all know, most chazzas and record shops contain little in the way of fish (more like prawns or plankton, to strain the analogy). Even if you discover that something is purportedly good then, if you don't know it, your anticipation is likely to be even greater until you get it home and on the turntable. It's still a form of gratification - merely less deferred, or diluted.
Confronted with nothing that vaguely interests me in the wild, I quite often purchase stuff to try and punt on. Given the possibility that no-one will want some dubious tat, this is another form of gambling. The proceeds of a stack of ho-hrmm stuff or my funk offcuts can then fund a nice and obscure single from Discogs or elsewhere. Given that the dough remains in the vinyl economy (thereby sustaining it, since the cash goes to other dealers) I don't consider this particularly amoral since it sustains the marketplace. Moreover: you're helping someone else find something they want (albeit: hardly for altruistic motives). Ending up with a pile of junk you think you might sell compared to the merits of a pile of duffers you hoped might be listenable are much alike, methinks. In both respects, the rejects should logically end up back in the chazza whence they came.
Having just spent the week in Belgium and purchased a stack of mediocre LPs and some killer singles however, I can only conclude that the best way of assessing a disc's merit would seem to be ... listening to it before stumping up the cash
Using a mobile is perhaps reprehensible, but isn't using a portable sometimes more cringe worthy? I once took mine to the dodgy Vauxhall booter and felt really guilty after listening to some knackered 50p 7" - and buying approximately none of them. Never again ... !
Last edited by Viva Chiba; 26-06-2012 at 05:13 PM.
I think that's a better thing to say. A few people are getting on their high-horse and saying that people are morally wrong for something that is really just a difference in attitude."I don't really care if other people use the internet (Youtube, Popsike, even this site) when they are out buying records but its not for me"
nb I do not possess a smart phone myself.
MUSHRUMPS Daily party-prog MP3 blog
I'll just add that I waited until I was outside the charity btw...on the other side of the road. I googled the LP...I recognised the sleeve but couldn't remember if it had some redeeming feature. Kid on drums with his dad behind him...on Decca. A blog confirmed it was naff...as were my suspicions.
I'll rarely need to rely on my phone...I only ever see crud of the highest order in charities anyway.
"Don't get involved in the f**kin' chat pages. It's just full of arseholes talkin' sh*te non-stop"
"Don't get involved in the f**kin' chat pages. It's just full of arseholes talkin' sh*te non-stop"
Yes Nige - I knew Format had used the cover for a mix tape cover so I thought there must be something on it. It was a long time before I had a smart phone mind.
"..hole...road...middle thereof"
At least you'll never have to take it back to Violet May's if it has a scratch or skip - believe me, that was an experience far more scary than facing any of the shopladies pictured above, especially for a young teenager...Violet could cut you to the quick with a choice one liner in no time!
you can hear colours when they rhyme...
Yes, that's it - bloody well ought to be good if they went to the lengths of making a record devoted to his precocious skills. I wonder if Steven remained a drummer into adulthood or whether the parental pressure was just too overbearing for him and he packed it all in and found God or something? I'll clearly have to revisit this item with a more open mind some time....
Boy George knew my father
I saw someone doing this yesterday with some turdy looking 90s dance action. I felt embarrassed for him.
Mixes for your delectation: http://www.mixcloud.com/danmatic/
I spray myself with sucker repellent
From an ethical, or etiquette, standpoint, the only way it would make sense to me is in the case to make sure you are not overpaying for something that costs 'real money' or to double-check a release version(I often came close to spending money on what seemed like a reasonably-priced original which was actually a bootleg). Having said that I don't own a smartphone.
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