It's no secret that rock and heavy metal possesses some of the most committed fans around.
Collectors In Rock celebrates the dedication of avid collectors from across the globe as they display and share some of their most prized possessions with us.
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Collector:
Rob Evans
Location: Chester, England
Location: Chester, England
Tell us a
bit about you and since when/why you have a passion for collecting vinyl:
Music as a
passion started in the seventies with bands like Slade and Sweet and progressed
from there. I’d always harboured a desire to be a part of the industry from an
early age. From my first gig in ’77 (Black Sabbath at the Liverpool Empire) I
was hooked and it just snowballed from there.
Not having an older brother or
sister to guide my musical tastes, I relied on magazines like Sounds etc. Also
none of my mates liked Metal, so I always felt like a loner. It wasn’t until I
met a guy at football, who was in a band, that I felt like I belonged
somewhere. I went in the van to all his gigs and suddenly I felt like I fitted
in. There’s a scene in Almost Famous where William Miller says to Penny Lane ‘I
have to go home’ and she replies, ‘You are home.’ That’s how I felt and it’s
took me on a journey of managing bands that never got anywhere, to writing for
some of the biggest magazines on the planet like Classic Rock, Planet Rock,
Burrn, Rock Candy with all the old Kerrang writers, Powerplay and Fireworks.
To
me, music is packed full of memories and emotions.
First
vinyl purchase: That would have to be an original copy of Black Sabbath’s
‘Paranoid’ album that I got from a school mate in 1976 for the princely sum of
fifty pence. It would prove to be the catalyst for a lifetime of collecting.
Most
recent vinyl purchase: The last vinyl purchase from a record shop before the
lockdown would have to be IQ’s ‘Nomzamo’ album. The last thing I’ve bought
online is Mendes Prey’s ‘On To The Borderline’ 7” single, something I’ve been
after for a while at a reasonable price.
Prized
possession(s): Isn’t every record a prized possession, memories from various
moments in time? I can remember buying certain albums at certain times, yet
others I sometimes forget I’ve even got. I’ll say any record from the NWOBHM as
it was a movement that I was right at the beginning of. Albums and singles from
bands like Raven, Maiden, Saxon, Leppard, Venom, Angel Witch and a whole raft
of others are my prized vinyl possessions.
The
needle(s) in the haystack (rarest): It would have to be my copy of Iron
Maiden’s ‘Soundhouse Tapes’ that I bought back in ’79 for the grand sum of
£1.20! It commands anything from £800-£2,000 pounds these days; mine is even
signed by Steve Harris, in ’84 if I remember rightly.
Most
featured artist(s) in your collection: Not an artist, but a label. I collect
all of the Ebony Records albums from the eighties. The likes of Dealer, Preyer,
Grim Reaper, Cobra, Touched, Savage, Chateaux, Blade Runner, Holland, Hammer,
Samurai, Tyga Myra, Fast Kutz and Rankelson are all prime slices of metal. I
especially love the Ebony records compilations of unknown bands – Metal Plated,
Metal Maniaxe, Metallic Storm, Metal Fatigue and Metal Warriors as they contain
some wonderful one-off’s from the world of metal. But like everything, they are
getting pricier by the day.
Top 5
favourites: I picked these albums and singles for the memories they’ve given me
over the years. This bunch has given me over the years some of my favourite
musical moments.
1) Wrathchild- ‘Stakk Attakk’. I loved this band in the eighties, followed them all
over the country. This is a reminder of great times.
2) Torino- ‘Customised’.
The debut album from Liverpool’s Torino is another reminder of wonderful times
watching them in the Warrington Lion, Runcorn Cherry Tree or the Kings Arms in
Wrexham.
3) Rox-‘Hot Love In The City’. Former Sounds writer and Kerrang! founder, Geoff
Barton, loved these boys and so did I and this single is arguably their finest
moment.
4) Silverwing-‘Sittin’ Pretty’. Another Barton rave, another wonderful band. This
12” single features ‘Teenage Love Affair’, check it out.
5) Def
Leppard-‘High and Dry’. Another band I adored throughout the seventies and
eighties. First saw them in a club in Birkenhead in ’79 in front of about forty
people. Their second album is by far their best.
Priciest
Piece: The aforementioned Iron Maiden single, Motley Crue’s ‘Too Fast For Love’
on Leathur Records or the Diamond Head white label debut, but you can throw in
the likes of Treason, Shock Split, Crucifixion, Wild Pussy, Nemesis,
Killerwatt, Urban Clearway, Artisan, Hyper Vyper, Arizona, Darklight and a
whole host of other British metal acts that regularly fetch over the £100 mark.
Worthless
wonder (not worth many pennies but might mean a lot to you!): My Slade singles
from when I was a kid in the seventies, bought for me by my mum and dad. They
are battered, but priceless and my first taste of music. I actually met them
once backstage at the Birmingham Odeon, Noddy Holder and Don Powell was
drinking pints of Whisky; it was intimidating and exhilarating in equal
measures.
Guilty pleasures: I help curate the Lost UK Jewels CD releases for an Italian label called Steelheart Memories alongside label boss, Primo Bonali. So far we’ve reissued nineteen CDs from obscure British bands like Peroux, Voyager UK, Torino, Tokyo, Geneva, Zero Zero, First Strike et al. It’s been fun tracking down old band members, collating memorabilia and writing the liner notes. They are a window to a bygone era.
Most regular place you purchase/trade/search: These days its virtual record stores like Discogs, Ebay or Musicstack that take a lot of my money. We are also lucky to have Grey & Pink records in Chester, one of the finest selections of used vinyl in the whole of the North West of England.
Bargain Bin: I was in a record store in Cambridge when I came across a copy of the Hammer Head (Ian Parry fronted Dutch band) EP, ‘Heart Made Of Steel’, for £5 pounds. But what made it even more of a bargain was the press releases, photos and hand written letters that were tucked inside. It was like a time capsule to the past.
Favourite non-vinyl collectable(s): I’m going to say my magazine collection that includes the first 500 Kerrang’s, Metal Forces, Boulevard Fanzine, AOR Classics Fanzine, Loud Fanzine and Frontiers Fanzine and many others. Or my Journey ‘Live In Houston’ DVD that is signed by Steve Perry after I interviewed him many years ago.
Favourite record shop from the past: The likes of Penny Lane records in Chester would have to be my personal favourite, so many memories attached to that store that includes meeting Lemmy and Motorhead. But out of town I’d always love going to Shades in London for the day, or Lotus records in Hanley, X Records in Bolton and ST records in Dudley. One of the coolest was Yanks/Power Cuts in Manchester. It was a huge deletions warehouse that had Vinyl and CDs by the bucket load for ridiculous prices and their sales were legendary.