Carl Cox has never hidden his love for vinyl, but the scale of his collection still feels almost unreal. Spanning more than 150,000 records, his archive stands as one of the most extensive personal collections in electronic music – and easily one of the most meaningful.
Housed at his home in Australia, the collection follows a strict chronological order, starting in the late 1960s and running through to 2007, the year Carl Cox stopped buying vinyl. As a result, it doesn’t just document dance music, it maps out entire cultural shifts across genres. From funk, soul and disco to house, techno, hip-hop, jazz and reggae, every shelf reflects a different moment in time, including rare Caribbean records passed down from his father.
Moreover, this isn’t a static archive. During his Cabin Fever livestreams in 2020, Cox brought parts of the collection back into the spotlight, pulling records directly from those shelves and reintroducing them to a global audience. Later on, the scale and significance of the archive found a new visual form through the ‘Carl’ photographic project with Mark Vessey, reinforcing its status as more than just a DJ’s library.
Of course, the story behind it runs even deeper. Long before digital tools took over, Carl Cox built his reputation through relentless digging, fast mixing, and a distinct three-deck style that earned him the nickname “The Three Deck Wizard.”
Ultimately, this collection represents more than quantity. It reflects decades of passion, movement, and evolution – a physical reminder of an era when music wasn’t just played, it was carried.
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