We found 1665 price guide item(s) matching your search

Refine your search

Year

Filter by Price Range
  • List
  • Grid
  • 1665 item(s)
    /page

Lot 115

Mixed Lot Includes Thirty Six Vinyl Records Amongst of which is The Cure's 1984 Album 'The Top' Fiction Label (FIXS 9), Dr Feelgood's 12" 45rpm 'BabyJane', The Who's 1966 EP 'Ready Steady Who' Reaction Label (592 001), 5 other 45s by The Who, 2 by Bob Dylan and The Pink Floyd 'See Emily Play' Columbia Label (DB 8214). Together with A Broadhurst Brothers 'Beatles' Ceramic Mug and Eighteen A. & B.C. Chewing Gum Trading Cards.

Lot 553

The Confederacy 1861-1865 Record & Book by Columbia Records together with The Union book and record by Columbia. Also records by Bach, Brahms, Beethoven & Mozart

Lot 204

Columbia wind-up gramophone with records

Lot 74

A walnut cased GEC three band wave valve radio, along with a small collection of 78 rpm records to include Brunswick, Columbia and His Master Voice labels and a quantity of old sheet music.

Lot 87

Vocal records, 10-inch, French: Declery: Columbia bl. & sil. 50566 La Charité; Dufranne: G & T 3-32620 Lakmé, Disque P66 Le Chalet / Lakmé, Zonophone X 82651/6 Chemin d'Amour / Noel Païen; Soulacroix: G & T 3-32013 La Mascotte, 3-332191 O sole mio, Pathé 292/3690 La Basoche / Trouvere (7)

Lot 244

Caruso: 48 12-inch records, solo and concerted; and two Victor, four Columbia by G. Elwes, 4 by Butt, 5 HMV by Butt, and three other records (64)

Lot 181

Vocal records, 10-inch: Basilides: Columbia D31036, Parlophone R1234; Lydia Chaliapine: Pathe PG 56, 57; Spani: HMV ER 320 (5)

Lot 236

Vocal records, 12-inch: 55, by H. Stevens, McCormack (6, mainly Columbia), May Peterson (4 Vocalion), Pons (V Disc 374), Eric Marshall (9 HMV, Vocalion, Brunswick), N. Williams (VF 575), Paikin (3 Vocalion), Scotney (4 Voc), de Gogorza (pre-dog 02110), Astra Desmond (5), Evan Williams, Allin and others, in 2 blue carriers

Lot 513

HODDER COLUMBIA THE PET BUBBLE RECORD BOOK & 5 NURSERY RECORDS

Lot 1017

A quantity of 78 rpm Records including HMV, album and case including Imperial, Columbia, etc.

Lot 257

Vinyl - collection of c. 1920's/early 30's 78 RPM records - Edison Bell (black, purple & red label), Rex, His Masters Voice (red & maroon label), Columbia, Regal/Zonophone etc in one box - please refer to supplementary photograph on David Duggleby website for full list of records Condition Report Click here for further images, condition, auction times & delivery costs

Lot 754

Seven large boxes of classical LP records including scarce stereo pressings and box sets, Decca/HMV/Columbia etc

Lot 463

An early 20th century Columbia table top gramophone, with records, etc

Lot 27

RALPH MAYHEW: 4 titles: THIRD BUBBLE BOOK: THE ANIMAL BUBBLE BOOK: THE PET BUBBLE BOOK: HAPPY GO LUCKY BUBBLE BOOK, each Harper Columbia, circa 1918, circa 1918, circa 1919, circa 1919, 3rd, 4th, 6th and 8th books in the Bubble Book series, 3rd and 4th signed and inscribed "Merry Christmas from Ralph Mayhew 1918" to front free end papers, each book with three records as called for, each original pictorial boards (4)

Lot 3461

A collection of ten vinyl LP records, including David Bowie (4) Heroes, Jethro Tull (2) Pink Floyd (4) including Pink Floyd Pipe's at Gates of Dawn, Columbia first pressing 

Lot 191

A Columbia portable gramophone, small collection of 78 rpm records, royal commemorative publications, etc.

Lot 74

A Columbia Windup Gramophone Record Player in Working Ordered with Collection of 78 rpm Records.

Lot 1285

A COLUMBIA WIND UP RECORD PLAYER, and a quantity of 78rpm records

Lot 1214

A Columbia portable gramophone; and records.

Lot 214

BEATLES HELLO LITTLE GIRL/'TIL THERE WAS YOU ACETATE - (***Please notify the auctioneer by email/phone of your intention to bid on this lot otherwise your bid may not be accepted on the day***) this unique 10" 78RPM acetate record featuring 'Hello Little Girl' on one side and 'Til There Was You' on the other was cut in the Personal Recording Department of the HMV record store on Oxford St, London. Brian Epstein had the disc cut from the Decca audition tapes before presenting it to George Martin (EMI) on 13th February 1962 in his desperate attempt to get them a recording contract. This meeting, despite Martin's initial reticence, was to eventually lead to the breakthrough they were looking for. The disc was later given to The Fourmost to record their own version of Hello Little Girl (recorded 3 July 1963) and then to Les Maguire of Gerry & The Pacemakers (recorded Hello Little Girl 17th July 1963). This is the first time it has come to the marketplace, having been tucked away in Maguire's loft until now. Epstein's handwriting on the labels reads as follows: side 1 Hullo Little Girl, John Lennon & The Beatles, Lennon,McCartney' and side 2 'Til' There Was You Paul McCartney & The Beatles'. The acetate is in VG (Very Good) condition with light scuffs and scratches - nothing heavy. It has been played through once when digitally recorded at BBC studios and it played through well with crackle but no skips or jumps. In his book Tune In, the leading Beatles historian Mark Lewisohn said of the disc, 'Its uniqueness is enhanced by Brian Epstein's handwriting on the labels, and the recognition of what it led to - making it one of the rarest and most collectable of all Beatles records.' According to Ian Shirley, Record Collector Rare Record Price Guide Editor "This is one of those Holy Grail items like the original Quarrymen acetate that the band recorded themselves. This acetate is a unique item that, in many respects, helped Brain Epstein to start the ball rolling to musical world domination'. Interviews with Mark Lewisohn and Ian Shirley can be found on our website. The lot also comes with a CD containing the digital recording taken from the disc at BBC studios on 19th February 2016. This is understood to be the first time the disc had been played since the 1960s. Background Information Extracted with permission from Tune In by Mark Lewisohn (volume one of The Beatles: All These Years), pages 1105-1108. Text © Mark Lewisohn Brian's April 1961 visit to Hamburg and Hanover as a guest of Deutsche Grammophon had already proven fruitful in getting My Bonnie released in Britain, and now it paid dividends a second time. Another delegate on the course was Robert Boast, manager of His Master's Voice (HMV), the self-proclaimed world's largest record store, situated on Oxford Street in the heart of London. After Decca's rejection, Brian took the opportunity to renew Boast's acquaintance; he had no obvious plan in mind, but Boast was an address-book contact and he was exploring every possibility. Brian had with him the Beatles' Decca tape and sat in Boast's office saying his boys would become very big stars if only someone would take a chance with them. 'He said he'd had a very wearing two days visiting record companies. It seems they just weren't prepared to listen. I was, though it was beyond my powers to help him. But at that time we had a small recording studio on the first floor, where budding artists could make 78rpm demonstration discs. I took Brian there and introduced him to our disc cutter, Jim Foy.' It made sense for Brian to pitch the Beatles from discs rather than a reel of tape. Every recording manager had an office gramophone (as they were still called), not everyone had a tape deck. The first floor at HMV included the Personal Recording Department, a smart counter beyond which customers could make one-strike records of personal greetings. Musicians used it too (the room contained a grand piano) and it was here, in 1958, that Cliff Richard recorded Lawdy Miss Clawdy c/w Breathless, which prompted Norrie Paramor to sign him to EMI's Columbia label. Jim Foy and Brian Epstein chatted while a lathe cut the Beatles' sound into 78rpm acetate discs of heavy black lacquer. As Foy would remember: 'I remarked that the tape sounded very good, to which he replied, rather proudly, that some of the songs were actually written by the group, which was uncommon. I asked whether they had been published, and when he said they hadn't I told him that the office of Ardmore and Beechwood, one of EMI's music publishing companies, was on the top floor of the shop. Should I fetch the general manager, Sid Colman? He said yes, Sid came down, listened to the tape and he too expressed interest. When I'd done the cutting, he and Brian went back up to the office.' ...George Martin's desk diary for 13 February 1962 includes Judy Lockhart Smith's lightly-pencilled untimed entry for 'Bernard Epstein'. Brian was chancing his arm at EMI, trying to wrest a Yes where there'd been a No. The recording managers had already turned down the Beatles on the basis of their appearance on the Tony Sheridan disc; Brian must have been hoping this wouldn't be remembered, and that he might score a better result with a personal approach and different product. It could also be that he was after any appointment at EMI House and George Martin was the only man available - two of his three A&R colleagues, Norman Newell and Norrie Paramor, were on holiday this week. George wasn't there when Brian arrived, so the first person he met was Judy. She would always remember appreciating how well-dressed, well-mannered and well-spoken he was, not at all like the other managers who came into the office, while Brian would later write, genuinely, of how he and Judy developed 'an instant friendship.' George's day was filled with appointments, and when he arrived he wouldn't have been able to give his visitor much time. The two sat across a desk - one man aged thirty-six, the other twenty-seven, both in smart suits and ties, and with polite, cultured voices that had benefited from self-improvement. Brian was desperate but trying not to seem so, George was tolerant, pleasant and in a position of power. Brian told him about the Beatles, saying how big they were in Liverpool and affecting surprise when George said he hadn't heard of them. This somewhat riled his host: as George would reflect, 'I almost asked him in reply where Liverpool was - the thought of anything coming out of the provinces was extraordinary.' By interpreting the way Brian remembered the meeting, there was probably time to hear only one of his new-cut records - a ten-inch 78 acetate with Hello Little Girl on one side and Till There Was You on the other. He'd written the essential details on the labels in blue fountain-pen. With limited space, and constantly keen to demonstrate the Beatles had more than one singer, he wrote that Hullo Little Girl [sic] was John Lennon & The Beatles - adding too the songwriting credit Lennon, McCartney - and that Til There Was You [sic] was Paul McCartney & The Beatles. Brian's recollection two years later was: 'George liked Hello Little Girl, Till There Was You. Liked George on guitar. Thought Paul was the one for discs'.

Lot 110

A Columbia gramophone in working order & with original box with a selection of records.

Lot 117

A Columbia 78 player and various records

Lot 485

A collection of vintage 78rpm records of different genres to include swing, jazz, blues etc on various lables such as John Bull, Columbia, Regal Zonophone, Capitol, Parlophone, HMV etc

Lot 541

Fifteen Vinyl Records by Pink Floyd and The Who Includes The Who's, 'A Quick One' Reaction Label (593002), 'The Who Sell Out' Track Label (613002), 'Live at Leeds', 'Tommy', 'Who Came First' and 'Who's Next', Pink Floyd's 'Dark Side of the Moon' and 'Relics' and 'Arnold Layne' 45rpm Columbia Label (DB 8156). Together with a selection of 45s. G+ condition.

Lot 109

A Columbia Grafonola gramophone, early 20th century; records, including Pinocchio HMV sleeve en suite, others including jazz, easy listening; etc.

Lot 147

78s - Impressive collection of around 200 x records, mainly popular vocal artists from the 40s/50s. To include releases from Charlie Kunz, Gracie Fields, Jack Payne, Nelson Eddy, Paul Anka, Slim Whitman, Frankie Layne, Vera Lynn, Ella Fitzgerald, Tennessee Ernie Ford, Fats Waller. Many titles issued on the big labels Brunswick, Capitol, Columbia and HMV. Condition is generally VG to Ex.

Lot 709

Pink Floyd: Division Bell - Columbia Records C64200 1994 blue vinyl album with gatefold still in original shrink (opened) EX+

Lot 832

X 21 CYLINDER RECORDS INCLUDING, STERLING & COLUMBIA, UNTESTED

Lot 393

An early 20th Century mahogany Columbia Grafonola wind up gramophone, raised on leaf carved cabriole legs, 98cm wide together with a selection of 78 records.

Lot 1394

A Columbia wind up grammar phone together with three boxes of records.

Lot 359

140+ 78rpm records including London American, Brunswick, Coral, Parlophone, Decca, Columbia, Oriole, HMV, Capitol, Polygon, Philips, The Crickets Pat Boone, Bill Haley and his Comets, Ted Heath, Tommy Steele, Jim Dale, Chas McDevitt, Petula Clark, Elvis Presley, Buddy Holly, Jubilee Speech by HRH The Prince of Wales, South Pacific, Classical & others

Lot 481

Columbia No 112 portable wind-up gramophone with 78rpm records of the Coronation of King George and Queen Elizabeth.

Lot 22

Fourteen classical records on the Columbia label, mostly opera recitals and arias with six by Maria Callas. SAX 2410 (Blue/Silver label), SAX 2573, 5268 and 33CX 1032 and 1923 (all four Red/Semi labels) and 33CX 1032, 1204,1231,1519,1598,1645,1681,1752 and, 1753 (all Blue/Gold labels). The condition of the vinyl appears to be excellent.

Lot 31

Approximately 170 shellac records plus a few 7" singles. Various genres. Labels include; HMV; Columbia; Rex; Brunswick; Regal; Decca and Parlophone.

Lot 139

US SOUL/FUNK - Excellent job lot of around 70 x 7" US funk & soul singles. Contains a number of demo records and some hard to find titles. Names to look out for include Neil Christian and the Crusaders on Columbia (DB707), Soul Brothers Six, John Byrd, The Esquires, Ray Peterson and a rare J.J. Barnes on Ric-Tic Records. Condition varies across the lot.

Lot 246

A fine collection of twenty original advertising gramophone needle tins Advertising His Masters Voice, each decorated on a red ground and still in original seal and boxes, a gramophone sound box, marked Aristocrat together with a Columbia Records cleaner.

Lot 135

Approximately one hundred vinyl records, mostly 1980s LPs, but also including easy listening, classical, latin, etc., together with twenty-one 78rpm light orchestral recordings on the Columbia, HMV, and Regal labels (Qty)

Lot 471

A 1920's Columbia table top gramophone and an album of 78 records

Lot 200

A Columbia no.112A portable gramophone, a small quantity of 45RPM records, a suitcase, a Hornby tin plate O gauge carriage and miscellaneous items.

Lot 374

A Columbia table gramophone and various 78rpm records

Lot 330

An extensive collection of various vinyl records to include Columbia and HMV examples.

Lot 1208

'COLUMBIA' OAK CASED GRAMOPHONE, and a quantity of 78 rpm records (handle)

Lot 1286

Portable gramophone: A Columbia Model 201 portable gramophone with No 9 soundbox, plano-reflex tone-arm (detached) and black case (lacking lid album); and ten records

Lot 1294

Records: A Saturn picture disc, Melody of Memoirs / Brumas; The Sounds of Time album; a Columbia demonstration record, D333; and three other records (6)

Lot 1662

Judas Priest: An original RIAA gold disc award presented to the band's drummer Dave Holland to commemorate the sale of more than 500,00 copies of the Columbia Records US album and cassette 'Ram It Down'

Lot 864

THE ROLLING STONES - RON WOOD/CHARLIE WATTS - a Ron Wood signed photo and envelope along with a Woody's Pecker plectrum, a Columbia records biography of 'Ron Wood From The Beginning' and a Post Office First Day Cover Music British Conductors signed by Charlie Watts.

Lot 779

A Columbia Phonograph Gramophone; together with two horns and Edison Records cylinders

Lot 1345

A 1930's Columbia 78rpm Radiograph Four, model 620, with record player and radio, serial no 620-648944, circa 1932, together with two boxes of assorted 78rpm records, 59 by 41 by 86cm high.

Lot 1415

Vinyl Records - demos 45s, 1950s and 1960s, London, RCA, Parlophone, Cameo Parkway, Columbia and Brunswick, Bron Acetate, in a carry case; others similar, 1950s, 1960s and 1970s assorted including LPs (5)

Lot 34

A Columbia table gramophone, and a quantity of 78 rpm records

Lot 499

Katy Perry signed sexy 16 x 12 inch colour photo. American singer, songwriter and actress. After singing in church during her childhood, she pursued a career in gospel music as a teenager. Perry signed with Red Hill Records and released her debut studio album Katy Hudson in 2001, which was commercially unsuccessful. She moved to Los Angeles the following year to venture into secular music after Red Hill ceased operations. After being dropped by The Island Def Jam Music Group and Columbia Records, Perry signed a recording contract with Capitol Records in April 2007. Perry rose to fame in 2008 with the release of the singles I Kissed a Girl - which had attention-grabbing and somewhat controversial lyrics - and Hot n Cold from her second album, a pop rock record titled One of the Boys. Her third album, Teenage Dream (2010), ventured into disco, and contained the U.S. Billboard Hot 100 chart-topping singles California Gurls , Teenage Dream , Firework , E.T. , and Last Friday Night (T.G.I.F.) as well as the number-three single The One That Got Away . Good condition

Lot 871

Columbia wind up portable gramophone and a few 78 records

Lot 559

A COLUMBIA GRAMOPHONE, and a box of records

Lot 320

An early 20th century Thomas Edison Home Phonograph, a small Edison Gem Phonograph, serial number G90367, both with covers with a box of Talking Machine Records from Columbia Phonograph Company

Lot 110

Columbia Grafonola No.118, Wagner 'Tannhauser' Vol. II records and a record cleaner

Lot 532

An early 20th century oak cased Columbia table top gramophone with records

Lot 1278

A Columbia gramophone and 78 RPM records Condition report: Well used condition

Lot 1045

A quantity of 78 rpm records well protected in their card sleeves and including Zonophone - "A Miniature Concert", H.M.V. - "The Song of The Volga Boatmen", Columbia - "Rondo Capriccioso"/"Largo in G", "Chauve Souris - Round the Hay Wain", "To the Forest"/"Vulcan's Song", Parlophone - "La Boheme", Columbia - "L'Elisir D'Amore"/"C'Africana - O Paradise", Regal - "Morning, Noon and Night", Columbia - "The Earl King"/"The Enchantress", "Comin' thro' The Rye"/"Home Sweet Home", Parlophone - "Egmont Overture", Columbia - "Oberon - Ocean thou Mighty Monster"/"Soul of Mine", "Plantation Songs Fantasia", Brunswick - "Dear Mr. Cable"/"You Can't Have Everything", and Columbia - "Old Fashioned Girl"/"Never Swat a Fly".

Lot 583

A Columbia table top 78 player, records, binoculars and cameras

Lot 90

An early 20th century oak cased Columbia table top gramophone with records

Loading...Loading...
  • 1665 item(s)
    /page

Recently Viewed Lots