The groups take up nine places in the top 10 list of the most expensive recordings
London:
The Beatles and Sex Pistols dominatetop-10 list of the most expensive vinyl records.
The groups take up nine places in the top 10 list of themost expensive recordings, which is compiled every two yearsby Record Collector magazine.
Queen are the only act to break up their stranglehold,with a rare version of Bohemian Rhapsody, reported Daily Mailonline.
Topping the list for a second year is a unique acetatecopy of That'll Be The Day/In Spite Of All The Danger by TheQuarry Men - a pre-Beatles group featuring John Lennon, SirPaul McCartney and George Harrison.
Their 1958 demo recording is valued at 200,000 pounds,while at number two is a 1981 reproduction of the single - onseven-inch and 10-inch vinyl - which goes for a more modest10,000 pounds.
A vinyl record that stockbroker John Duff Lowe, fromYatton, Somerset, kept at the bottom of a drawer in his homefor more than 20 years is today named as the most valuable inthe world by industry bible Record Collector.
The magazine places the Pistols' God Save The Queen/NoFeelings at number three.
Originally released in 1977, prices appear to have shotup around 60 percent as the Queen celebrates her DiamondJubilee year, with one copy fetching 12,630 pounds in recentmonths.
The punk idols are also at number five with the acetatecopy of Anarchy In The UK, with No Fun on the B-side, itsprice estimated at 7,000 pounds. Only three copies are knownto exist.
The lower reaches of the top 200 in the magazine showgrowing prices for UK heavy metal acts such as Iron Maiden, at189 with a rare brown vinyl 12-inch version of Twilight Zonegoing for 800 pounds, and Holocaust's Slay That Dragon at 191,valued at a similar amount.
The groups take up nine places in the top 10 list of themost expensive recordings, which is compiled every two yearsby Record Collector magazine.
Queen are the only act to break up their stranglehold,with a rare version of Bohemian Rhapsody, reported Daily Mailonline.
Topping the list for a second year is a unique acetatecopy of That'll Be The Day/In Spite Of All The Danger by TheQuarry Men - a pre-Beatles group featuring John Lennon, SirPaul McCartney and George Harrison.
Their 1958 demo recording is valued at 200,000 pounds,while at number two is a 1981 reproduction of the single - onseven-inch and 10-inch vinyl - which goes for a more modest10,000 pounds.
A vinyl record that stockbroker John Duff Lowe, fromYatton, Somerset, kept at the bottom of a drawer in his homefor more than 20 years is today named as the most valuable inthe world by industry bible Record Collector.
The magazine places the Pistols' God Save The Queen/NoFeelings at number three.
Originally released in 1977, prices appear to have shotup around 60 percent as the Queen celebrates her DiamondJubilee year, with one copy fetching 12,630 pounds in recentmonths.
The punk idols are also at number five with the acetatecopy of Anarchy In The UK, with No Fun on the B-side, itsprice estimated at 7,000 pounds. Only three copies are knownto exist.
The lower reaches of the top 200 in the magazine showgrowing prices for UK heavy metal acts such as Iron Maiden, at189 with a rare brown vinyl 12-inch version of Twilight Zonegoing for 800 pounds, and Holocaust's Slay That Dragon at 191,valued at a similar amount.