Unless your library has new vinyl coming in it will not work. The library records are the records from hell in my experience. They look like they have been walked on from my experience. But the goal is to be creative and check out a ton of places. Sometimes record store owners will be just into three types of music and they monthly have boxs of stuff they purchased in a collection that they don't want. It could take awhile, but if you are cool and they like you they will let you go through the stuff they don't want and you pay 10 cents a record. This has been my experience. The great part is they don't know everything, no one does and if you get into some really strange music sometimes these guys either don't want it or don't know what it is.
Half of real record collecting is making friends and taking years at getting what you are looking for. That is unless you want to pay top price then you go to record conventions or pay shop retail.
I don't know where you live but downtown Los Angeles or Seattle, mostly every big city will have good shops downtown, but you will pay.
You want to base your success on a yearly basis not a weekly basis. I really didn't buy expensive stuff. Maybe an import Pink Floyd or something but most of the time I would see a $100 Yardbirds record on the wall and settle for the scratched one I found somewhere else. Most stuff I just wanted to hear a couple of times. I had no need for some over priced record. The most I would ever pay is like $20.00 usd. That would be for something I really wanted.
The other great thing is to have record collector friends. They will never show you where they go. It is kind of a rule that collectors will keep their prime fishing holes secret. Even if you know someone for years, they may only show you a second rate place. You can go on runs to big record stores together and when they learn your style and price curves, your Buds will show you key product. The strange thing is even though there are books on prices, every record store prices stuff different. All have gems if you are willing to look through a couple thousand records to find them.
Most shops have bins, if you look close and careful you will find two secret places. One place is where the collectors before you tried to hide a great deal if they don't know the owner and the place will not save the find and they do not have the cash. You will find the records out of place. Maybe hid in the childrens record section!
The other stash place will be under the records. I used to find stuff like four mint UFO records under the record racks where someone found them and was going to buy them at a future date.
Finding someone elses treasure is all part of the fun. I even lost record collector friends after finding rare records right under their nose by looking in a different place. I would not give them the records to buy so they just hated me. It can get weird at times.
Go into a record store and talk with the manager ask him if there was any on hold albums that could be for sale that someone left for to long with out paying for. This is lost capital for the owner, he may go through the stack and find some he thought were picked up. He may let you buy them. Also ask where the boots are, Just say something like that. Many record stores have a secret group of pressing which are not shown to the general public. Funny though because if you ask they will show you. They are just not in the open.
Go into a record store ask where the records are that they are throwing out. They all have stuff they need to get rid of to make room for what is coming in. I loved hearing the finds my friend made in the early 1980s of such throw away records.
Quote:
Originally Posted by
BotByte 
Just thought of something
I'm mostly going to needledrop, so I can check them out from the library. Record them (make sure it's good) then return them
Brilliant!