Know How - Double Way

Welcome to Old Skool Anthems
The Old Skool Resource. Since 1998.
Join now

JACKG

Well-known member
VIP Gold Member
Sep 15, 2004
1,879
41
48
Iv had this a while and think its ok.

Nothing particulary special but not a bad little italo tune.

Its obviously pretty sought after and Iv had a few peeps ask about it but never let it go as yet.

Out of interest what do you lot reckon the best mix is?

I honestly cant make me mind up on this since the day I got it :S
 

Antz

Active member
Nov 9, 2004
1,054
0
36
40
Tony Towers
I remember seeing one on Records North-West for £30, not too long before all the hype. I left it cause I thought it were expensive :( :cry:
 

ilovepiano

Active member
Jul 9, 2002
5,329
3
38
Wow, I've just looked on Discogs and can't believe how many people have this in their wantslist! I thought this was relatively unknown! :eek:
 

Charlie

New member
Jun 16, 2003
443
0
0
52
Carlisle
www.myspace.com
I picked this up for a fiver on ebay over a year ago and even though I've hammered it I still love it phones: :love: .

As for the copies that's been mentioned on this thread already, well without trying to offend anyone, this to me is what epitomises the bad side of discogs.
No insertion fees so people put massively over inflated prices on tunes because it's a no lose situation. If it sells they are laughing, and if doesn't they've lost nowt.
Unfortunatly this is really starting to have a knock on effect.
If someone lists something for £200, that realistically aint worth a fraction of that price, then rest assured it aint gonna sell. It then lies dormant on ogs until the next person who wants to sell a copy comes along. They see the same item listed at £200, assume it's worth that price and then list there copy at say £180 expecting it to sell. The chances then of someone coming along and listing the record for what it's actually worth or cheaper are significantly reduced.

Discogs used to be the place for bargains but so many greedy fookers have cottoned on to it now that the chances of picking up a rarity on the cheap are few and far between.

It's only my opinion and one of which I dare say a lot of people wouldn't agree with, but I personally think that anything being listed over a certain price should have an insertion fee and time scale for how long it's on there. At least that way it might just put people off from listing stuff for silly money just for the hell of it.

What annoys me more than anything is that half the time the people that's selling tunes at silly prices don't give a shit about the records that they are actually flogging. It could be justified if someone was in dire need of cash and listed something for a hefty price that they really didn't wanna part with.
At the end of the day everything has it's price and I personally wouldn't let something go that meant a lot to me on the cheap, BUT I wouldn't try to sell something that meant jack shit to me for a fortune just to be a greedy bastard.
 

waxHead

New member
Feb 15, 2006
330
0
0
Unfortunatly this is really starting to have a knock on effect.
If someone lists something for £200, that realistically aint worth a fraction of that price, then rest assured it aint gonna sell. It then lies dormant on ogs until the next person who wants to sell a copy comes along. They see the same item listed at £200, assume it's worth that price and then list there copy at say £180 expecting it to sell. The chances then of someone coming along and listing the record for what it's actually worth or cheaper are significantly reduced.

I think it works both directions... even if the first copy listed is for £200, if it's been sitting there and the next seller sees that, they might list it for £100. If THAT sits there, and someone else comes along, maybe it gets listed at £80... and so on. There are LOADS of records that used to fetch crazy prices (Alpha Dy, anyone?) that simply don't b/c there's either more available, or ppl realize the records aren't worth as much as they thought. Chances are, if a bunch of these turn up, the price hits £20 at some point.
 

etech

Member
Apr 25, 2006
232
1
18
Sunny side of Birmingham
I think it works both directions... even if the first copy listed is for £200, if it's been sitting there and the next seller sees that, they might list it for £100. If THAT sits there, and someone else comes along, maybe it gets listed at £80... and so on. There are LOADS of records that used to fetch crazy prices (Alpha Dy, anyone?) that simply don't b/c there's either more available, or ppl realize the records aren't worth as much as they thought. Chances are, if a bunch of these turn up, the price hits £20 at some point.

Meeting Place Anyone?:crazy: