Barbara Ellen 

For the record, I was a vinyl vandal

Turntable sales might be booming – but not for those of us who treated our record collections with total negligence
  
  

Bad track record: ‘My surviving records are scratched, reeking of wine, and sprinkled with fag ash’
Bad track record: ‘My surviving records are scratched, reeking of wine, and sprinkled with fag ash.’ Photograph: Alamy Stock Photo

There are reports of bumper sales of turntables this Christmas. Young people are buying them and older people too, keen to revisit their old records. Which is understandable, though spare a thought for those of us whose old vinyl wouldn’t be up to it.

As a former music journalist, it’s sometimes presumed that I “must” have a great vinyl collection. That rather depends. I had a great time listening to my records, but are they in a great state now? Nope.

My surviving records are scratched, reeking of wine, sprinkled with fag ash and even a few boot prints. The inner sleeves have nearly all vanished, and I once found a copy of Kate Bush’s Hounds of Love on the kitchen floor, wrapped with drunken tenderness in a dirty tea towel.

Why did these atrocities occur? That would be because, at the grave risk of generalising, I’m female. So, back in the day, I actually played my records. I didn’t alphabetise them, store them in plastic sleeves or hold them at the sides, snapping peevishly: “No, like this!”

I definitely had no thoughts about their potential resale value, which is why I would probably get about 99p for the whole lot now or even have to pay someone in a biohazard suit to dispose of them safely.

Basically, my music was loved to bits and treated extremely badly. The upshot is that I’m pretty sure I wouldn’t be able to play these records any more. Oddly, I’d have to go full circle and buy them again. Do I regret my vinyl vandalism? Not one bit. If I did it the fun way, then I did it the right way.

 

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