Seller Story: Howard Weinberg, Washington, DC
“We grew up in a little Virginia town with less than 5,000 people and there was one tiny record store. My brothers and I would save up our allowances for weeks and weeks to go buy an album for eight dollars. That’s how much they would overcharge an eight-year-old because they had no competition!
Howard probably should have been a disc jockey, with how much of an audiophile he was. If you wanted to borrow a record from Howard, you couldn’t just come over and borrow a record. Howard was going to have you come over and he would play the record for you on his top-of-the-line turntables with the best quality speakers because he was so obsessed with preserving the collection and in enjoying the sound the way it was meant to be enjoyed. But you weren’t ever allowed to touch those records!
He would buy every pressing that Capitol Records released of The Beatles. He probably has fifteen copies of every Beatles record, not including the bootlegs or pressings from overseas like Japan and Germany. Some of the things like the box sets he collected are very rare. Anything related to The Beatles, he bought. He took great care in protecting these things because he recognized their value, and spent tens of thousands of dollars just purchasing mp3 backups of his vinyl collection so he could further preserve them.
In terms of maintaining his collection, he was obsessive. Every corner of the room was filled with albums in protective casings. When we were going through the collection, it was so deep that you could pull away hundreds of records and there would just be another row of records behind it. We’d come back after a day’s work of going through the collection and it would all be there again, it seemed. So it then became a joke, “Howard’s been back, he was out buying more records!” – Marc Weinberg, Brother


Pink Floyd "Wish You Were Here" Half-Speed Mastered Audiophile Pressing LP

The Replacements "Pleased To Meet Me" Club Edition LP

The Beatles "Ballads" French LP

KISS "Fried Alive!" Fan Club LP On Red Splatter Vinyl

The Beatles "From Us To You, A Parlophone Rehearsal Session" 10" Blue Vinyl EP

Moody Blues "Days of Future Passed" Original Master Recording LP

George Harrison "All Things Must Pass" First Pressing LP with Poster

The Beatles "Rare Beatles" UK Pressing LP


The Beatles "Rock 'n' Roll" LP Box Set

Rush LPs Including "2112"

Deep Purple "Shades Of Deep Purple" Original UK Parlophone Pressing LP

The Beatles "Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band" Original Master Recording LP

Black Sabbath "Master Of Reality" Original US Pressing LP with Poster

The Beatles "Magical Mystery Tour" 1978 UK Pressing LP On Yellow Vinyl

Roy Orbison and Traveling Wilburys LPs

Hüsker Dü and Bob Mould First Pressing LPs Including "Zen Arcade"

The Allman Brothers LPs Including "At Fillmore East"

The Beatles "Abbey Road" Original Master Recording LP

The Beatles "Return to Abbey Road" UK Fan Club LP

Nils Lofgren LPs Including "Cry Tough"

Iggy And The Stooges LPs Including "Raw Power" Original Dutch Pressing

Black Sabbath "Vol. 4" Original US Pressing LP

Prince "Purple Rain" LP with Poster and Related 12" Singles

Pink Floyd "Dark Side of the Moon" Original Master Recording LP

Metallica "Master of Puppets" First US Pressing LP

Sex Pistols and Public Image Limited LPs Including "Bollocks" Misprint

Cluster "Zuckerzeit" Original German Pressing LP

MC5 "Kick Out The Jams" Original French Pressing LP

The Beatles "From Liverpool" Japanese LP Box Set

Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers Promotional LPs

Cream LPs Including "Wheels of Fire" First Pressing

Pink Floyd "Piper At The Gates Of Dawn" LP

"The Beatles Collection" 45 rpm Singles Box Set

Townes Van Zandt "Delta Momma Blues" Promotional Poppy Records LP

Can "Ege Bamyasi" Original US Pressing LP

Nine Inch Nails "The Downward Spiral" Promotional Double LP

Lou Reed "Transformer" Original US Pressing LP

Short Cross "Arising" Original Private Press LP

Sonic Youth "Daydream Nation" First Pressing Double LP

Jimi Hendrix Experience "Electric Ladyland" Original UK Pressing LP

The Beatles "The 1964 And 1965 Ed Sullivan Shows" LP

New Order LPs Including "Power, Corruption, & Lies"

The Beatles "White Album" 1976 German Pressing LP on White Vinyl

The Police LPs Including "Synchronicity"

The Kinks LPs Including "You Really Got Me" Original Mono Pressing

Led Zeppelin US Pressing LPs

Television and Tom Verlaine LPs Including "Marquee Moon" Original Pressing

The Beatles "Rubber Soul" Original Master Recording LP

Jethro Tull "Aqualung" Original Master Recording LP

Rolling Stones "Sticky Fingers" LP

The Beatles "Please Please Me" Original Master Recording LP

Chicago "Chicago Transit Authority" Original Master Recording Double LP

Electric Light Orchestra LPs Including "Out of the Blue"

The Beatles "Abbey Road" 1976 Japanese Pressing LP

Uriah Heep LPs Including "The Magician's Birthday"

Guns N Roses "G N'R Lies" Club Edition Pressing LP

What was it like record shopping with him?
He could easily spend hours and hours at a record store. Howard would very carefully go through every section, and if there were used records he’d inspect them thoroughly in the light for scratches and blemishes. He’d talk to managers and employees and ask about specific singles, releases and rarities. I brought him to Amoeba Records in Los Angeles where I used to live, and he walked in and looked around and said, “Well, it’s OK but it’s no Plan Nine.”
Is that where he sourced most of his collection?
In Richmond, he loved going to the local record store called Plan Nine. He bought a lot of his records there; new records, used records, imports, everything. Oftentimes, the record stores would buy for Howard. They would place orders for him because they knew he was a serious collector. He would also go to shows and conventions for vinyl collectors, where he picked up a rare copy of Yesterday and Today by The Beatles, notorious for its cover which was almost immediately censored after its release.
What kinds of things was he looking for?
He was focused on finding obscure and unusual releases from The Beatles. Early in their U.S. career, they didn’t sign with one particular label. There are a number of singles released on different labels that were quickly pulled off the shelves after they signed with Capitol. Particularly, “She Loves You” on Swan Records, and promotional singles that were released to radio DJs prior to the record release.