[78-L] value of records
David Lennick
dlennick at sympatico.ca
Sun Feb 14 20:16:51 PST 2010
You didn't determine whether Cappy had the gun because I was in the store, by
any chance?
I don't know why but I often got good deals from Tom. Ten bucks per album
suited me fine when the albums were the Paul Robeson Recital on Othello and a
mint vinyl original of Tubby The Tuba.
dl
DAVID BURNHAM wrote:
> MB wrote:
>
> Better off selling
> them at a buck then not having them last long enough to find a ten buck
> buyer.
>
>
> ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
>
> Tell that to Tom Kennish of Royal Garden records in Cleveland. I went in there several years ago and told him I was looking for classical 78s. He looked at me as if I had grown a second head but didn't offer me any deals. He said all of his records were $7 each but if I chose a large number, he would give me a special price. Well I spent the whole day there going through his cramped back room picking out records and at the end of the day presented him with a sizeable pile of around 100 records. He said he would give me them for $800. I pointed out that that was more than $7 each. He explained that since I had come all the way down from Toronto, I obviously wanted to make the trip worth while and it would be more so if I spent more money!! I left most of the records there and took a dozen or so at the original $7 each. I went back about a year and a half later and the pile of records were still sitting where I had left them on my first
> visit, but now he told me the price had gone up to $8 per record, (and several of them were broken). When I asked him how this makes any sense since he's not making any money on records he isn't selling, he said he would rather smash a record and throw it in the garbage than lose money by selling it for less than $7. I might also point out that on the day I spent going through all of his records, not one other customer came into the store. A strange place!
>
> Another place I frequented was Cappy's in Detroit. He had better prices than Cleveland but every time I went in there nobody else came in, in fact more often than not the door was locked and I had to knock on it for several minutes before he would come from whatever he was doing and open it for me. One day I got there and found David Lennick in the store. On this occasion, Cappy had a gun prominently hanging out of his pocket, so I guess I should feel flattered that he never appeared to need to take that precaution when I was in there.
>
> db
> ____________________________
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