Your record collection is a beautiful, dusty mess that a spreadsheet can't fix. Use the Discogs app to scan your vinyl, track its value, and rediscover the music you already own.
You finally did it. You bought that record you’ve been hunting for ages. It wasn't cheap, but it's the centerpiece of your collection. You get home, slide it out of the sleeve, and put it on the turntable. Perfect.
Now what?
You put it on the shelf. A week later, you can’t remember if you own that obscure B-side from the band you saw in a dive bar back in 2017. This is where a record collection turns into a beautiful, dusty mess.
The answer isn't a spreadsheet. Spreadsheets are for taxes, not music. You need an app.
Insurance, for one. If your collection is ever damaged, an up-to-date inventory with estimated values is the difference between getting a check from the insurance company and getting nothing.
But it's about more than that. It’s about rediscovering what you already have. And it's about not buying the same album twice because you forgot you grabbed it at a flea market last year. I did that. It was a copy of Rumours. Now I have three.
For 99% of collectors, the answer is Discogs. It’s a massive, user-built database of nearly every record ever pressed, and the app is how you access it.
Just scan the barcode on a sleeve. Nine times out of ten, the exact pressing—down to the matrix runout codes—pops right up. You tap to add it to your collection. Done. The app tracks median sale prices, giving you a rough idea of what your records are worth. You can also buy from your wantlist right in the app.
It’s the default for a reason. The database is huge and it's free to use.
Getting everything cataloged the first time can feel like a project. I remember clearing a Saturday to finally tackle my "unsorted" pile. I just sat on the floor for three hours scanning barcodes. My 2011 Honda Civic was parked outside, leaking a little oil. It was a whole thing.
A few, but they solve different problems.
Honestly, just start with Discogs. If you eventually find yourself wanting more detailed database features, you can check out something like CLZ.
Cataloging isn't a one-time thing. It's a process. Every time you bring a new record home, add it to the app right away. Before it even hits the turntable.
That's the only way to keep your digital collection from falling out of sync with the actual records on your shelf.
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