Rhino Records Vinyl, CDs & Cassettes
The Time – Ice Cream Castle (LP Vinyl) Steve Martin – King Tut (Picture Disc LP Vinyl) New Order – Low-Life (LP Vinyl) Charles Wright & The Watts 103rd St Rhythm Band – Express Yourself (LP Vinyl) Echo & The Bunnymen – Porcupine (CD) Dio – Decade Of Dio: 1983-1993 (6-CD) Faces – Ooh La La (LP Vinyl) Queen Of The Damned – Music From The Motion Picture (2-LP Vinyl) Little Beaver – Party Down (LP Vinyl)
Sold outLittle Beaver – Party Down (LP Vinyl)$ 39.95$ 39.95Unit price / perThe Monkees – A's The B's & The Monkees (2-LP Vinyl) New Order – Brotherhood (LP Vinyl) Rod Stewart – Alternate Atlantic Crossing (LP Vinyl) T. Rex – Electric Warrior (LP Vinyl) Buckingham Nicks – Buckingham Nicks - (CD) Steve Martin – Wild And Crazy Guy (LP Vinyl) Phil Collins – Going Back (CD) New Order – Movement (LP Vinyl) Devo – Q: Are We Not Men? (LP Vinyl) Ice-T – Power Rarities (LP Vinyl) Phil Collins – Singles (2-LP Vinyl)
Sold outPhil Collins – Singles (2-LP Vinyl)$ 42.95$ 42.95Unit price / perDr. Feelgood – Oil City Confidential Soundtrack (2-LP Vinyl) Squeeze – Play (CD) Phoenix – Alphabetical (LP Vinyl) ZZ Top – Rio Grande Mud (LP Vinyl)
Rhino started in 1973 as a record store in Los Angeles, the kind of place run by people who cared too much about music to just sell it without an opinion. By the late 1970s, it had become a label, and by the 1980s, it had quietly become the most trusted name in the reissue business, building a reputation track by track on the idea that old records deserved the same care and attention as anything being made new.
The philosophy was simple and turned out to be pretty radical: find the recordings that mattered, go back to the original sources, remaster them properly, write liner notes that actually tell you something, and package the whole thing like the music is worth taking seriously. At a time when catalog releases were often treated as afterthoughts, Rhino treated them as the main event.
Eventually absorbed into Warner Music Group, Rhino became the catalog arm of one of the world's largest music libraries, granting access to the Atlantic, Elektra, and Warner archives. The Grateful Dead's catalog has lived here. So have the Doors, Fleetwood Mac, Talking Heads, Led Zeppelin, Ray Charles, the Ramones, and hundreds of others. The box sets Rhino produces are still the benchmark that every other reissue label gets measured against, detailed, beautifully packaged, and made for people who want to actually understand what they're listening to and why it matters.
If you follow Record Store Day at all, you already know Rhino shows up with some of the most sought-after releases every year. The records in this collection carry that same standard.