This Man Spent 40 Years Collecting Vinyl — Now He’s Turning It Into a Public Treasure
Zero Freitas is said to own the world’s largest vinyl record collection — an astonishing 8 million discs. Yet, even after decades, he can’t stop hunting for more.
What began as a childhood fascination has grown into a massive obsession that fills a warehouse the size of an airplane hangar in São Paulo, Brazil. But behind the piles of LPs lie decades of therapy, broken relationships, and an ambitious plan to share his treasure trove with the world.
From Childhood Passion to a Vinyl Empire
The story starts in 1957 when five-year-old Zero Freitas saw his father wheel a brand-new hi-fi system into their home — complete with 200 LPs. A week later, he found his mother’s secret stash of 500 albums. Music was everywhere, and young Zero wanted it all.
By age 14, he bought his first record: Roberto Carlos Sings to the Children. By high school graduation, he had collected around 3,000 albums. College didn’t slow him down; instead, he spent more time digging through flea-market crates than attending classes.
In the late ’70s, Freitas got creative, placing tiny classified ads seeking to buy entire record collections. Soon, he was driving around São Paulo in a beat-up VW Beetle, picking up whole living-room-sized libraries of vinyl. By his 30th birthday in 1982, his collection had ballooned to roughly 30,000 LPs.
Growing Bigger: Buying Stores, Warehouses, and Radio Vaults
What truly scaled up Freitas’s vinyl empire was not just money but building a global network. When his bus company flourished in the early 2000s, he used the profits to hire scouts worldwide. One agent in Havana collected nearly 100,000 Cuban LPs, making Freitas joke that the island must be “rising” without all that vinyl.
Between June and November 2013, over a dozen 40-foot shipping containers arrived in Brazil, each carrying about 100,000 records. These records now live in a massive 25,000-square-foot warehouse in São Paulo, where shelves reach the ceiling and forklifts weave through endless rows of boxes.
A team of university interns—mostly history students, because Freitas says “music students talk too much about music”—logs around 500 new records daily. At this pace, cataloguing the collection could take decades.
Freitas targets entire inventories, not just rare gems. He acquired Paul Mawhinney’s three-million-record archive in Pittsburgh, swept up Colony Records’ Times Square stock, and saved the legendary Music Man Murray’s store in Los Angeles. Closer to home, he rescued 25,000 LPs from a retiring Brazilian broadcaster’s radio station library—almost 20,000 of which were previously unknown to his team.
Even when offered thousands of polka albums, Freitas didn’t hesitate, accepting them all while joking about the obscure bandleaders he still lacked.
The Heavy Price of Owning Everything
While his collection grew, so did the toll on his mental health. Freitas began therapy in his late 20s, right after his marriage ended—and he has never stopped.
“I try to remember two things,” he told The Vinyl Factory in 2016: “The records don’t belong to me, and I don’t belong to the records.”
The emotional weight shows in quiet moments. Once, he held a Duke Ellington LP signed “With affection, Duke” and became visibly overwhelmed. Another time, hearing that 80% of mid-century Brazilian music had never been digitized, he covered his face and groaned.
To balance the pressure, Freitas and his second wife built a meditation room in their home and traveled the world studying different spiritual teachings. Yet, the constant arrival of pallets filled with vinyl makes “letting go” a daily struggle.
Friendships are difficult. Freitas keeps other collectors at arm’s length, joking that most are “crazy people” and preferring solitude as he works late into the night in the warehouse.
A New Mission: Saving Music for the Future
Today, Freitas measures success not by how many records he owns but by how many will survive him. In 2014, he started the process to transform his warehouse into Emporium Musical, a nonprofit listening library open to the public.
The plan: turn the 8-million-disc mountain into a shared archive. Visitors could drop needles on turntables and explore history through sound. Up to 30% of the collection is duplicates, which will be loaned out like library books, while rare LPs will be preserved in fireproof, climate-controlled vaults.
Freitas prioritizes saving old records to preserve history, especially Brazilian music—less than 20% of which has been digitized.
He’s already shipped 10,000 Brazilian LPs to New York’s ARChive of Contemporary Music, exchanging duplicates for preservation expertise. Recently, another 20,000 albums from Ceará, previously unseen by his team, are first in line for digitization.
Still Collecting, But With a New Purpose
Despite his plans, Freitas still can’t resist a promising phone call or a new crate of records. But now, every addition comes with a question: How can this music live beyond me?
Answering that question, day after day, is how this legendary collector is learning to be a true historian—turning a lifetime of obsession into a gift for generations to come.
Source: Headphonesty – This Man Spent 40 Years in Therapy Over His 8-Million Vinyl Collection