Robbie Williams and Rita Ora have kicked off festival season with the Radio One Big Weekend.
Beatles and Pistols top vinyl list

The Beatles took several slots on a list of the most expensive recordings
The Beatles and Sex Pistols have dominated a newly compiled list of the world's priciest vinyl.
The groups take up nine places in the top 10 list of the most expensive recordings, which is compiled every two years by Record Collector magazine.
Queen are the only act to break up their stranglehold, with a rare version of Bohemian Rhapsody.
The Quarry Men - a pre-Beatles group featuring John Lennon, Sir Paul McCartney and George Harrison - once again hold the top spot with a unique acetate copy of their demo That'll Be The Day/In Spite Of All The Danger.
The 1958 recording is valued at £200,000, while at number two is a 1981 reproduction of the single - on seven-inch and 10-inch vinyl - which goes for £10,000.
The magazine, which publishes its list on Thursday (November 8), places the Pistols' God Save The Queen/No Feelings at number three with a rare acetate version fetching roughly £10,000.
Another version of the same record, when the group were briefly on A&M Records, is valued at £8,000. Although 20,000 copies were made, most were destroyed, making it a collector's item.
The punk idols are also at number five with the acetate copy of Anarchy In The UK, with No Fun on the B-side, estimated to go for £7,000. Only three copies are known to exist.
The Quarry Men recording at the top of the list was created in July 1958 by the Beatles trio, plus John "Duff" Lowe on piano and drummer Colin Hanlon. The acetate version ended up in Lowe's hands and he sold it to Sir Paul who is still thought to own it. He had it restored and it was used to make the handful of 1981 copies.
Ian Shirley, editor of the Rare Record Price Guide who compiled the list for Record Collector, said when it comes to collectable rare vinyl "the Beatles remain the blue chip investment".
latest music videos
related stories on msn
latest music news

Ellie Goulding performs at Radio One's Big Weekend

The Saturdays perform at Radio One's Big Weekend in Londonderry

Stone Temple Pilots, from left, Dean Deleo, Eric Kretz, Robert Deleo, and Scott Weiland (AP/Matt Sayles)

Liz McClarnon had to think long and hard before reuniting with Atomic Kitten

Robbie Williams performs at the Radio 1 Big Weekend in Londonderry

Louise Redknapp doesn't want to reform with girlband Eternal

One Direction were big winners at the Social Star Awards

Paloma Faith dedicated a song to Sir John Madejski after he stormed the stage at her gig

Avril Lavigne and Marilyn Manson recorded duet Bad Girl in the middle of the night






