What was your first record?


The first record I ever owned: ‘At the Hop’ by Danny and the Juniors ( just listened to it, and it made me get up and dance!)


The first record I ever bought myself: ‘Meet the Beatles’

 

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First 45 I bought I think I can still remember> "Brandy (You're a Fine Girl)" Looking Glass. My granny had bought us the first Beatles album. And my dad was into big band so I listened to a lot of that, especially Three Little Fishes.

My parents were into theater (they were off and on president/vice president of the local Children's Theater) and had the original Jesus Christ Superstar album. Wish I still had that. Still love the album.

First LP was "Made In Japan" Deep Purple. Hmm, maybe I had an Ian Gillan obsession?

Next was Sly and the Family Stone's "Fresh".

Grand Funk's "We're an American Band" was up there too.

Cheap Trick

Live at Budokan

Played on my ultra low end TT/8 track combo unit.  Can't remember the brand to save my soul!

Probably RUSH 2112... but it was sooooo long ago and sooooo many albums now I truly can`t remember.

1st record: a 45 of The Beatles "Can't buy me Love"

1st LP:  E,L & P; Pictures at an Exhibition.

Still have the LP and a better British pressing.  45 is long gone ...

My first was from my paper route money. Elton John Don’t Shoot Me I’m Only the Piano Player

First I ever bought with my own money was the 45 Monster Mash by Bobby "Boris" Pickett. Walked to the record store on a Saturday morning and laid down the $1.00 profit from my paper route. Man I loved that song.

My first 45 was either "Dizzy" by Tommy Roe or one of The Beatles early singles.

My first few albums were all greatest hits (due to limited budget/allowance) by the likes of: The Byrds, Bob Dylan, Donovan, Doors and the Guess Who.

My first "proper" album was either "Crosby, Stills & Nash" or "In The Court of the Crimson King."

 

I think the first record I bought was Grand Funk Railroad’s " Mark, Don and Mel".

Songs of Leonard Cohen. In 1968 I found the album in a record store. I “hid” in among the classical albums til I could return the next day with money. I think it was $3.99. At the time I had a turntable but had not finished building my Heathkit receiver or my coax speakers, cabinets covered with walnut contact paper. 
 

T-Rex, Electric Warrior. First week it was available. Think I paid something like $1.29 or $1.99 at Kresge’s 5&10 in St. Pete, FL. Got it for a party. Still have it.

🤔🙄😬🤦‍♂️...there may have been a couple of 45's...I remember a Spencer Davis Group one, but it hasn't made the journey to now....

First LP.....jazz guitar with Gabor Szabo (Spellbinder, '66)....later, The Pentangles'

double album Sweet Child '68....

Had burnt out on AM top 10 stuff, got into jazz and... I guess you'd call it 'progressive folk' in the early HS era (error? *L*).

Couldn't take the Beatles seriously until the White album.... Hell, I'd even picked up the Blue Cheer lp prior to.....

....just another tale of tail and wasted youth sin-drum.....🙄

The Sixties were great...what I remember of it...😏

...then I begin to space back to some of the 'other' that accompanied all that.......and find this appropo for a segway....

In 1963, my cousin Judy gave me her little RCA Victor 45 player. The first record I bought was "I Will Follow Him," by Little Peggy March. That Christmas, my parents bought me my first stereo, a suitcase model from Motorola, plus two Beach Boys albums (Surfin' USA and Surfer Girl), two by Lesley Gore, and one by Skeeter Davis.

One reason I got a stereo for Christmas was because my mother got so sick of my playing "Be My Baby" on repeat during assassination weekend.

My first album I chose for myself was Meet the Beatles in January, 1964.

I still like playing songs on repeat. iTunes and YouTube are good for that.

1977 framed 45 thoughtfully given ... 3-piece Cover-Band performing mainstream artists 60’s & 70’s genres during 1970 decade. Italian with vocal chops rhythm / lead, bassist whom kept up following suit were close dear buddies of ... a wild-n-crazy Father perched behind drum kit providing backup vocals on occasion.

First LP purchased around 2005

Cold Roses, Ryan Adams & The Cardinals

Think the first record I bought with my own money was Simon & Garfunkel's Greatest Hits, then likely something by The Carpenters. Always loved Karen's voice. Then I discovered rock and roll. 

Davy Crockett 

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=U3fveCH_74U

Sunday at 7 pm laying on the floor a few feet from the TV screen( and being told to move back) watching Disney, the DC series would play on occasion. Woo that was 3/4 of a century ago. 

First record (45) was "Little Willy" by Sweet. (I was 10 years old). First album was about a year later, BTO's "Not Fragile"

Top pop radio hits released 1967. I can't remember the actual title. A Columbia red 6 eye mono pressing. Paula Clark, Nancy Sinatra, etc... I wish I still had it and I've searched the World Wide Web thoroughly but never even came close. 

My first purchase was Deep Purple Book of Taliesyn and Grand Funk Caught in the Act.  I always credit the Deep Purple as being my first record, it was the first of the two I selected.

I was around 5 and it was record of Horowitz plays Rachmaninoff piano concerto 2 on 78rpm booklet.

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Either Three Dog Night's One or Jimi Hendrix Are You Experienced. I would like to believe the latter. 

First record I owned/purchased was the 45 single "Surfin' Bird" by the Trashmen

Beatles, Abbey Road. I was only allowed to listen via headphones, as this was getting a little too close to the devil’s music.

It’s good to still be kicking! It looks like I am one of the oldest people on here. I bought “Peter, Paul and Mary” in 1962, when I was 12. I still have it. It looks like a Brillo pad.
 

Bent

When I joined the Columbia Record Club in 1962 (the model upon which VMP bases it's subscription service), my choice for my free first LP was Johnny Horton's Greatest Hits (I loved "North To Alaska"). Titles that followed were the early Paul Revere & The Raiders albums.

My first record was Stevie Wonder’s Talking Book and even took it to school for show and tell say in my music class.

Me? Introducing the Beatles on VeeJay records.

Hi, Glenn. 

If you like Mary Robbins, may I suggest you check out the Carolyn Sills Combo.

Great musicianship, brilliant songwriting 

One of their albums, Return to El Paso, retells the story in 5 songs, each from the perspective of one of the protagonists. 

 

Return to El Paso - The Carolyn Sills Combo.jpg

 

They also try to keep a lot of the classic western swing & other artists alive by including a few select pieces in their live repertoire. 

I'm going to see them live this weekend. 

Enjoy! 

Ken

 

 

Not counting the scores of 45 rpm Beatles records and their first couple LP's that my siblings and I bought together, I'd have to say:

1st: Jefferson Airplane: Crown of Creation

2nd: King Crimson: Court of the Crimson King

Went to visit a friend one Saturday when I was eight and wound up spending the afternoon in his older brother’s room listening to rock and roll 45s. Begged my folks for a copy of Dion’s The Wanderer. My first LP was The Beach Boys Surfin’ Safari, which I received as a gift. The first LP I bought myself was Bob Dylan The Time They are a’Changin. I was 10 years old and shoveled snow for the dough.

A 45 of "Sky High" by Jigsaw.

I'm a 21st century digital man now.  I own absolutely no vinyl.

LP: Magical Mystery Tour

45: Incense and Peppermint

I sold flower and vegetable seeds door-to-door for my spending money in the spring and summer.

In the fall I raked leaves.

In the winter shoveled snow.

First record my mom bought me (age 7 or 8):  Kiss - Dressed to Kill

First record I bought myself (age 9):  Rush - Farewell to Kings

 

:)

I think I was maybe 12 (1970). My parents got me a suitcase phonograph and two 45 rpm records. “No time” by the Guess Who and “Venus” by The Shocking Blue. I now have about 3000 records 

I have been thinking n thinking what was the first album i bought with my own money.The Beatles 65,bought it at Woolworth's in Manhattan. I was a Freshman in High School Aviation HS class of 69.

First record was “Headquarters” The Monkees - mom bought it for me at the local grocery store, King Soopers, in Denver

First one bought with my own money was “Closer to Home” Grand Funk Railroad - still remember listening to it with my cousin after my grandpas funeral.  Never got to see them in concert, but my cousin did.  I was always jealous.

It’s interesting that we all remember that first record.  So much music from that time that I say is part of my actual DNA 

I appreciate this thread. Thank you to the OP. I was just wondering though, as I read all these great responses, and remember all the great albums I’ve purchased over the years… What will people who are budding music lovers “now” be reminiscing about (in regards to their music) 30, 40, 50+ years from now…? First download? First streaming service? I feel fortunate to have been able to participate in this event. To be able to think back and remember exactly when I bought a particular album, one that I can still pull out and play today. Remember being a kid and saving every penny, then walking to the record store and buying ONE album, because that’s all I had the money for, and spending hours picking “the one”. Then do it all again the next time I saved a couple bucks. 

KISS 

Destroyer

7 years old bought with my own Christmas money. That same year my uncle gave me The Who - Who's Next. My dad got a new stereo system that year so my older sister and I were allowed to use his old Scott system that was relegated to basement duties.

 

 

while I had purchased many 45s, as a young child, I don’t really count them. My first two LPs were bought on the same day when I was about 13 years old. I purchased Santana Abraxas and the Beatles hard days night at a little record store in my great aunts community. I was staying with her for the weekend.

Herb Alpert and the Tijuana Brass… “Whipped Cream & Other Delights”. Then everything Beatles. Hey, I was just a 12 year old kid!

Johnny Cash - Live at Folsom Prison.

My parents had a 'record player' console and my mother used to play her records on it, and I know I heard those. But that's the first LP I bought with $5 given to me by my grandmother.

My first album, I never bought a single, was a mono (it was cheaper) Blues Project “Projections”. This album was the prototype of my next 55 years of musical taste