March 5, 2024 Record of the Day

The Doors 45 that started it all is “Light My Fire.” It would ignite a remarkable career for the group and its infamous lead singer, Jim Morrison. An original copy on a standard Elektra label is worth up to $25.00 but on a yellow Elektra label with the Elektra girl logo it can now sell for $150.00.

March 4, 2024 Records of the Day

Philles Records issues their first single in1961,“There’s No Other Love Like My Baby” by The Crystals. Philles is a combination of the first names of owners Phil Spector and Les Sill. The Crystals’ 45 is valued up to $40.00 but their first album from 1963, containing the hit, can now sell for $350.00.

March 3, 2024 Record of the Day

In 1955, Sun Records founder Sam Phillips launched America’s first all-female radio station, WHER, in Memphis. The slogan used then could not be used today. Being the news department was all female, the quip was “and now the news from a broad.” Among the most collectible records on Sam’s Sun label is “Lonesome Old Jail.” An original copy on 78 rpm can sell for $5,000.00 but the 45 rpm single with “Greyhound Blues” on the flip side is now worth up to $20,000.00.

 

March 2, 2024 Record of the Day

The story goes that a young British boy, Raymond Jones, walked into Brian Epstein’s Liverpool record shop in 1961 and asked for a single called “My Bonnie” by Tony Sheridan  and The Beat Brothers. Epstein went to see the band live and was so impressed with the backing group, the Beat Brothers, that he signed on as their manager and they became the Beatles. An original copy of “My Bonnie” by Tony Sheridan and the Beat Brothers on Decca Records is now worth up to $12,000.00. Originals have a multi-color stripe across the center. Bootlegs are black and silver without the color stripe.

March 1, 2024 Record of the Day

Lou Reed, songwriter and guitarist died of liver disease at the age of 71 in 2013. Reed was the leader of the Velvet Underground in the 60’s. The band has many collectible records like the single, “Sunday Morning,” from 1966. Release on Verve Records, a copy can sell for $1,500.00 today.

February 29, 2024 Record of the Day

In 1958, 7000 screaming teenagers rioted at the first rock and roll concert held in West Berlin. It featured Bill Haley & His Comets. Best known for “Rock Around the Clock” and “Shake, Rattle and Roll, it was Haley’s earlier hit with the Saddlemen, “Rock the Joint,” that lit the fuse. A copy of the single on Essex Records from 1952 can now sell for $250.00. Make it $800.00 for a red vinyl copy.

February 28, 2024 Record of the Day

Ed Sullivan had to tell the audience to be “Quiet!” during the appearance of the Rolling Stones. But the screams never ceased. The band closed out the show with “Time is On My Side.” Sullivan vowed that the Stones would never appear on his show again, but later relented. A copy of “Time is on My Side,” released on London Records, can now sell for $100.00 with its picture sleeve. 

February 27, 2024 Record of the Day

On October 24,1962, James Brown’s appearance at the Apollo Theater in New York was recorded for an album called “Live at the Apollo.” The self-financed LP cost Brown $5,700.00, and would sell over a million copies.  “Live at the Apollo” was the first album recorded just the way it was performed. There was no separation in the tracks, making it impossible for King Records to issue singles. An original copy can get you $200.00 today.

February 26, 2024 Record of the Day

Elvis Presley is on a Billboard chart outside of Memphis for the first time when “Blue Moon Of Kentucky” hits #6 in Nashville and #3 in New Orleans in 1954. The song, written in 1946 by Bill Monroe, was meant to be a slow waltz, but Elvis put his own style on it. Bill Monroe wasn’t happy. Released on Sun Records, the Elvis copy on a 45 or 78 can now sell for $1,200.00.

February 25, 2024 Records of the Day

The Supremes are the first female group to have a number one album in the U.S.A when their LP, “Supremes A-Go-Go,” reaches the top in 1966. It knocked The Beatles’ “Revolver” out of first place. The Supremes album, released on Motown, is now worth up to $100.00. An original mono copy of “Revolver,” from Capitol Records, can sell for $750.00 today.