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10 Apr

American Tour Ed Rudy

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American Tour Ed Rudy

Find Cash in Your Stash

Join the most stimulating treasure hunt in America! Now when you discover records in flea markets, thrift stores, second-hand record stores, or your own basement or attic, you may without apparent effort find out what they’re worth

Inside, you’ll find the most comprehensive guide to vinyl anywhere. It includes artists, labels, formats, titles, dates of releases, variations, errors, fakes, cross references, and current prices. Plus, you’ll get the Goldmine Condition Grading Guide, a market report, and counsel on buying, selling, and collecting: everything you need to know to turn vinyl into gold.

Covers the entire Golden Age of Vinyl (1948-1991)

  • 150,000 45s, albums, picture sleeves, extended play singles, and 12-inch singles
  • Rock, Pop, Country, Soul, Rhythm & Blues, and almost all other genres
  • Market Report: What’s Hot and What’s Not
  • Advice on Buying, Selling, and Collecting Vinyl

Goldmine Condition Grading Guide Two feature articles:

  • From My Cold, Dead Hands
  • The World’s Biggest Record Collection

About the AuthorMartin Popoff has written 30 books, conducted 1,500 consultations with rockers and record collectors, and has written articles for numerous music periodicals, including Goldmine magazine. He has a personal collection of more than 15,000 records.

American Tour Ed Rudy

American Tour Ed Rudy Picture

American Tour Ed Rudy

American Tour Ed Rudy Picture

American Tour Ed Rudy

American Tour Ed Rudy Photo

American Tour Ed Rudy

American Tour Ed Rudy Picture


Really helpful!
Wow, the former versions of Standard Catalog were great, but this is the best so far! The author added 18 years (1976-1991), so it covers a lot more territory. The listings are genuinely detailed, so I may discern variations and tell bootlegs from authentic records. I would unquestionably commend this book to any record collector!

For the record, this is a great book
Cheesy review title aside, the firstborn thing I do when I go to thrift stores is look through the record albums. I gather them just for the fun of it and so I have for the most part kitchy music and goofy album covers that have in particular caught my attention. Flipping through this monster-sized book, though, I was enjoyably astonished to find out that, while not in near mint condition, my copy of Dean Martin’s Hey Brother Pour the Wine is at least more than the 50 cents I remunerated for it. At a hefty 1,300+ pages, collectors get lots of priceless data and prices.

Hot off the presses!
Join in the vinyl revival! Whether you find records at flea markets, thrift stores, second-hand record stores, or the attic or basement of your family home, you’re sure to find worthful and interesting facts when it comes to the Golden Age of Vinyl in this new Goldmine guide.

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