Singles

When I arrived in the USA almost 23 years ago, I was strip searched at LA airport. They had me down to my daks, going through my clothes and shoes looking for something that wasn’t there. Part of the process was a thorough luggage search, and I can only imagine how surprised the guy was when I opened my (only) suitcase to reveal this:

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This isn’t a post about that experience, it’s a post about what a 21 year old man that emigrated to the US thought valuable enough to pack with him. My suitcase that day contained a tiny amount of clothes, one extra pair of shoes, a few important documents, and hundreds of CDs and 7″ vinyl singles. Looking back on it now I can’t imagine how heavy it was (I had to use a cart in the airport for a single large hard-case suitcase) or how I wasn’t charged extra baggage. Those were the days, I suppose.

I’d always loved singles, and bought them religiously for all the bands I followed. I treated them well, and still have almost all of them today. To get them here I bundled them up in bubble wrap (in other words, inadvertently made them look as much like drug packages as possible!) and packed them tightly in around the similarly packed CDs. I don’t recall any of them getting damaged, and ever since arriving here they have lived in the comic box shown in the above photo.

I’m reasonably sure the first 7″ single I ever purchased was this one, probably bought in 1982:

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In those early days I owned very few since I didn’t have my own record player. I bought them every now and then (Homosapien by Pete Shelley, Rockit by Herbie Hancock) but mostly bought cassettes of new albums. It wasn’t until maybe 1983 that Bernard and I started buying vinyl like no tomorrow, and by 1986 I had my own record player in my room and bought new records (often singles) almost weekly it seemed.

Here’s another one from those early days:

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I bought the above because of Michael Hutchence (!!) recommending Nick Cave in an interview. I remember liking it, and thinking he looked like Julian ‘Zzap64’ Rignall on the cover 🙂

But enough history, let’s look at some highlights from the big box of 7″ vinyl that lives, mostly ignored, in my house today:

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That’s the first ever Mute records release! I was a fan of so many bands on the label, when I saw this guy for sale used at Rices it was an instant buy. To this day I can’t imagine how it got there (much less to Australia) given it was released it such limited quantities. A treasure of my collection to be sure.

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That’s Depeche Mode’s first single Dreaming of Me (on top, released in 1981), and there last wide-released 7″ single from 2009. I remember having trouble finding it, but eventually did in Japan a couple of years later. In those days vinyl was almost completely dead, and 7″ singles in particular hadn’t been seen for years. You may be aware of the big vinyl resurgence in the last few years, but 7″ singles aren’t exactly coming back.

The box is about 40% Depeche Mode singles (including three copies of many – UK, USA, Australian), about 30% Erasure and the rest Nick Cave, Sisters of Mercy, Mission, Fields of the Nephilim and a few random ones thrown in. As you may imagine of a collector as crazed as myself, many of these collections are complete (for instance, I have all known Mode, Nephilim and Erasure 7″ vinyl). Getting them entailed many trips to the import stores in Sydney (I used to go monthly), as well a semi-regular purchases from UK shops for which I used ‘international money orders’ and would wait months for the package to arrive. I also had a penpal (!) in The Netherlands that helped me get some of the harder to find European releases during the early 90s; I even still have one of the ones he sent me still in the bag it was purchased in!

Here’s some of the attractively-designed Sisters singles:

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And the Nephilim stuff, which includes multiples since KLS & I merged our collections:

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There’s a large amount of limited editions in the box as well, and in fact towards the last years of the popularity of 7″ vinyl, many releases were only available in limited or unusual versions. For instance many singles are pressed in coloured vinyl:

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Or transparent vinyl:

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Or picture discs:

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Or – and this one is quite special – silver vinyl:

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I’ve also got quite a selection of bootleg singles (which were very popular with the ‘goth’ bands):

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And even several flexi discs (pressed on acetate so they could be included with magazines):

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I hadn’t looked through the box of singles for many, many years and it was a bit like opening a time capsule. While I still have a working record player, I didn’t actually play any of them yesterday since every song on every one of them has since been made available on CD or for download, so their more curios now than essential possessions for the diehard fan.

But I had fun buying them back in the day, and used to listen to them over and over again. I’m happy I’ve still got these things; they’re one of the few possessions from my youth I still own today.

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