cheapo cheapo
Cheapo Cheapo

I used to work in Wardour Street and I sepnt many interesting hours in Cheapo Cheapo in Rupert Street.
Sadly it has now long been closed. Rave On!...Ian
Loved the record stall @ Cheapo's being outside by the market. Bought loads of r'n'b, doo wop, r'n'roll from here all with no centres. Lots of demos, Advance Copies etc and all with the prices scribbled on the front of the paper wrapper (and sometimes even on the labels themselves.
Just used to pick 'em out on the look of the labels but mostly it was terrific stuff. So the staff may have been gruff and offhand-they were, but their product was ace so who cared?!!! Comment: Lynne Brodie.
(Jan 26, 2014) Lester Owers said:I started buying off Philip when cheapo cheapo was a stall in front of the Chinese shop which later became the cheapo cheapo shop, that must have the late 60s early 70s. They used to have all the promo lp that reviewers or djs did not want. I used to fiddle my way up west and this shop was part of the circuit of stores.
(Feb 5, 2013) Bob Ensell said:I regularly visited through the '70s and '80s, usually making for the basement where the jazz, blues, soul and gospel records were kept. The staff in general were unfriendly but maybe this was the price you had to pay because Cheapo Cheapo lived up to its name and was stuffed with vinyl at the lowest prices in town. They'd also offer a price for pretty well any old records you took in. Best deal was to take a credit note and and use it to buy some new stuff. There was an excitement in thumbing through the racks, anticipating the sudden appearance of a yearned for classic. John Peel often mentioned the shop on his Radio One programme.
(Jan 26, 2013) PJC said:A fascinating shop with a huge amount of stock, most of it apparently in no order whatsoever, so one needed an open mind when browsing. I didn't go there often because the odd character behind the counter was gruff, unhelpful and quite impervious to courtesy. Perhaps he just saved time by taking an instant dislike to me. Nevertheless, it is a great shame that such an interesting store is now gone.
(April 21, 2015) This wonderful second hand record shop where music journo’s took their review copies was also a lunch time haven even allowing for the entirely graceless staff. Comment: David Lawson.
Robert Greenwood Very miserable staff, though. It was like a TV sit-com about selling records but scripted by Samuel Beckett.
Rob Ford Ha ha...I remember checking a Bo Diddley LP at the counter and handing it back to miserable Phil because it was covered in blue paint. He got extremely huffy and snatched the remaining records out of my hands saying "You won't be wanting the other ones then!". The Saturday staff were especially intimidating.
I went immediately to three record companies, announcing myself as 'Chrissie Hynd, NME'. I walked out with a many albums 'to review' as I could carry, took them straight to Cheapo, Cheapo's in Soho, sold the lot and was on the next hovercraft to the city of love. Chrissie Hynde - Reckless
( March 16, 2016) Bought from the stall regularly. The salesman was a little aloof but offered advice and would play things for you on his portable record player. He was an advocate, to me at least, of the merits of Arlester Christian and I bought a number of Dyke and the Blazers singles as a consequence. Never regretted. Happy memories. Comment: Trauts Heytarl
Name michele casadei Comment: Thank you Wolfgang Zink and everyone else who left a comment on this page! Was Phil the owner the guy with the beard? He vaguely looked like Richard Thompson, I am saddened to learn about his passing, I have good memories of that place from the 1990's, when I went there few times a week and bought loads of records! That shop was my youth!!! Cheers! (Nov 26, 2016)
Sadly it has now long been closed. Rave On!...Ian
Loved the record stall @ Cheapo's being outside by the market. Bought loads of r'n'b, doo wop, r'n'roll from here all with no centres. Lots of demos, Advance Copies etc and all with the prices scribbled on the front of the paper wrapper (and sometimes even on the labels themselves.
Just used to pick 'em out on the look of the labels but mostly it was terrific stuff. So the staff may have been gruff and offhand-they were, but their product was ace so who cared?!!! Comment: Lynne Brodie.
(Jan 26, 2014) Lester Owers said:I started buying off Philip when cheapo cheapo was a stall in front of the Chinese shop which later became the cheapo cheapo shop, that must have the late 60s early 70s. They used to have all the promo lp that reviewers or djs did not want. I used to fiddle my way up west and this shop was part of the circuit of stores.
(Feb 5, 2013) Bob Ensell said:I regularly visited through the '70s and '80s, usually making for the basement where the jazz, blues, soul and gospel records were kept. The staff in general were unfriendly but maybe this was the price you had to pay because Cheapo Cheapo lived up to its name and was stuffed with vinyl at the lowest prices in town. They'd also offer a price for pretty well any old records you took in. Best deal was to take a credit note and and use it to buy some new stuff. There was an excitement in thumbing through the racks, anticipating the sudden appearance of a yearned for classic. John Peel often mentioned the shop on his Radio One programme.
(Jan 26, 2013) PJC said:A fascinating shop with a huge amount of stock, most of it apparently in no order whatsoever, so one needed an open mind when browsing. I didn't go there often because the odd character behind the counter was gruff, unhelpful and quite impervious to courtesy. Perhaps he just saved time by taking an instant dislike to me. Nevertheless, it is a great shame that such an interesting store is now gone.
(April 21, 2015) This wonderful second hand record shop where music journo’s took their review copies was also a lunch time haven even allowing for the entirely graceless staff. Comment: David Lawson.
Robert Greenwood Very miserable staff, though. It was like a TV sit-com about selling records but scripted by Samuel Beckett.
Rob Ford Ha ha...I remember checking a Bo Diddley LP at the counter and handing it back to miserable Phil because it was covered in blue paint. He got extremely huffy and snatched the remaining records out of my hands saying "You won't be wanting the other ones then!". The Saturday staff were especially intimidating.
I went immediately to three record companies, announcing myself as 'Chrissie Hynd, NME'. I walked out with a many albums 'to review' as I could carry, took them straight to Cheapo, Cheapo's in Soho, sold the lot and was on the next hovercraft to the city of love. Chrissie Hynde - Reckless
( March 16, 2016) Bought from the stall regularly. The salesman was a little aloof but offered advice and would play things for you on his portable record player. He was an advocate, to me at least, of the merits of Arlester Christian and I bought a number of Dyke and the Blazers singles as a consequence. Never regretted. Happy memories. Comment: Trauts Heytarl
Name michele casadei Comment: Thank you Wolfgang Zink and everyone else who left a comment on this page! Was Phil the owner the guy with the beard? He vaguely looked like Richard Thompson, I am saddened to learn about his passing, I have good memories of that place from the 1990's, when I went there few times a week and bought loads of records! That shop was my youth!!! Cheers! (Nov 26, 2016)