Classical lp dilemma - recommendations, please


I'd like to buy the best quality recordings of beethoven's 9th, moonlight sonata, chopin's fur elise, and anything mussorgsky, but i'm new to buying classical lps. There are loads of recordings of each and i'm not sure which are quality and which aren't. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks in advance.
lazarus28
There are plenty of published guides out there. My favorite is The Virgin Guide to Classical Music by Jeremy J. Beadle (lots of music background, and multiple recommendations, but I'm not sure it's still in print). Ted Libbey and Jim Svejda also have guides out, which I'm pretty sure are available. Penguin and Gramophone publish compendiums as well.

Most of the focus is on CDs for obvious reasons (i.e., that's all that 99.9% of the world buys, you dinosaur, you). Nevertheless, the three authors I mentioned above all make some recommendations of older recordings from the analog era, so they'll be some help to you. You might try scouting used book stores for older guides, though I can't guarantee success.
Hello 23yr old dinosaur -- which of course, relates to vinyl, not your age; by the same token I'm a double dinosaur :). Furtwangler & Klemperer (conductors) for Beethoven's 9th, for his piano works (incl. Elise) I recommend the following pianists: Brendel / Gieseking or Backhaus, for Mussorgski try 2nd piano concerto with Richter or Arrau on the piano. These should be reasonably easy to find on LP.
I too find the Virgin Guide more consistent than Gramophone or Penguin. If you read french, the Diapason old guide is IMO one of the best guides. Cheers!