Record Collector is the UK's longest-established monthly music magazine for the fans who want to dig a little deeper into the subject of rare and collectable records. Founded in 1979, Record Collector is buzzing with features about music, with artist interviews, discographies and all the inside knowledge that only this highly respected title can deliver. Filled with comprehensive and trusted reviews, in which modern gems nestle alongside classic reissues. There’s also a Diggin’ For Gold and Value Added Facts sections, which sift the musical treasures from retro rubbish, gives readers the inside scoop on what’s happening in the world of music auctions and let’s you know which vinyl sitting in your attic could mean you’re sitting on a gold mine. And, of course, there’s all the news that any discerning music fan could want delivered directly to your device with a Record Collector digital edition.
Record Collector
For The Record • SEND YOUR PRAISE, MISSIVES AND CALLS FOR THE DEIFICATION OF JOE GEESIN TO: rc.editorial@metropolis.co.uk, or to Record Collector, 2nd Floor, Saunders House, 52-53 The Mall, London W5 3TA, or via social media
Hello, and welcome to RC546
I Was There • A reader's recollection of a key music event
THIS MONTH'S CONTRIBUTORS
The days of his life • Freddie Mercury’s unseen personal collection set to be exhibited and auctioned, darlings!
Tracy Nelson • Mother Earth singer on her latest guest-packed solo set
Acoustic
Duckin’ and drivin’ • Hank Davis, author of Ducktails, Drive-ins And Broken Hearts, talks 50s music with Tony Burke
We’re shopping • Study reveals the best recordshopping towns across the UK
Hell-o’ Dolly • Dolly Parton rock album with host of guests due
Not really gone • Deacon Blue best-of and career-spanning box set in the offing
UPCOMING VINYL RELEASES • News and views from the world of vinyl
MY PRECIOUS
POP ART • Numerous rock’n’pop artistes have proven dab hands with other artforms over the decades. RC artist Paul Bowler paints a picture of some of those who work on other canvases
The Collector • This month: wine writer Neal Martin
VALUE ADDED FACTS
Diggin’ For GOLD • Our regular look at the more arcane corners of record collecting. Includes Vintage Venue
SPIT AND POLE-ISH
HE DRINKS A SCHLAGER DRINK
MOST Wanted • From Lil houses to Monster Movies to the Pig City, this month's collectables from Paul Rigby come in all sizes Now includes Whole Love Of Lots
WHOLE LOVE OF LOTS • This month's big scorers online
Tina Turner 1939-2023
Not Forgotten
auteur to author • Luke Haines writes the shuk out of rock'n'roll Britain's favourite rock'n'roll bad boy
TALKING HEADS • On the couch with RC's resident shrink, Dr Tim
33⅓ minutes with… Lora Logic
“WE LIKE SEX PISTOLS AND PINK FLOYD” • Across four decades and countless madcap ideas, The Flaming Lips have evolved from indie noiseniks to purveyors of Disneyesque symphonia to multi-media art ensemble, each new album expanding the group's sonic world and conceptual ambitions. Accidental hits (She Don't Use Jelly; Do You Realize??) have pulled them into the mainstream on occasion, and yet the Lips have consistently refused to court commercial success - and often seemed to actively shun it, with a string of extra-curricular projects, including a homemade sci-fi movie and a line in deconstructive covers albums, defying even the most hardened Lips fan to make sense of it all. Frontman Wayne Coyne tells Jason Draper why the extreme-embracing unit will always remain a "weirdo studio band".
THE LIPS BATTLE THE ROCK MONOLITHS • UNCOVERING THE FLAMING LIPS' COVERS ALBUMS
WIND OF CHANGE • It is...