Curt A wrote:You guys need to get writing...

Sure, you are right. In my opinion, there are many mixed reason why this happened only sparsely and will happen sparsely (if at all) in the future. I will try to list some of the mentioned reasons, which may weigh more or less in each specific EU coutry - Italy being perhaps the sole country in which all of them concurr heavily at the same time:
1 - there are too few gramophones available on the EU market to begin with;
2 - the few "serious" gramophones available cost a fortune;
3 - there is few people in EU owning a house / warehouse large enough to hold a true gramophone collection;
4 - there is few people in EU wealthy enough to put together a serious gramophone collection;
5 - wealthy people in EU tends to be less interested in philanthropy / humanities / diffusion of knowledge;
6 - EU collectors tend to live segreated letting as few people as possible know about their valuable collection, and they tend not to share knowledge / information with others in order to "snap" good deals to other potential buyers / collectors.
7 - different languages are spoken in EU, thus a country-specific book would have only a very limited market, and would need to be professionally translated in order to expand such market, and would need to be re-edited, printed and distributed by foreign editors in other countries, which is a costy operation for a book that will remain, in any case, a
niche book.