A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 11/11/25

York, UK | First look: Inside York’s new record shop—with its tribute to legendary city store. A brand new record shop opens in York today (Saturday, 11/8). Record Plant will open its doors on 26 Gillygate from 10am—offering a mix of new and second-hand records, cassettes, and memorabilia. The Leeds-based business has its flagship shop in Farsley since 2023, and is excited to be opening its second bricks-and-mortar store in here in York. YorkMix chatted with the owner, Choque Hosein, to find out more. “I’ve been involved in music all my life,” said Choque. He’s part of the band Black Star Liner, which formed in 1994, and their second album Bengali Bantam Youth Experience! was nominated for the 1999 Mercury Music Prize. The name Record Plant is inspired by the name of the studio where Fleetwood Mac recorded their album ‘Rumours.’ “That’s why there’s a lot of Fleetwood,” said Choque. “We just did it as a bit of a joke, really. It’s still the biggest selling album—it’s never left the top 100!

Mercer, GA | Vertigo Vinyl spins from freshman dream to record success: Three revolutions later, Noah Silver ’26 and Vertigo Vinyl play on in Mercer Village with an eye for expansion. Vertigo Vinyl traded jump scares for Florence Welsh’s haunting vocals this Halloween, kicking off the holiday with a listening party on the day that Florence + The Machine released its new album, “Everybody Scream,” on Oct. 31. The shop regularly hosts listening parties for a variety of artists, as it did last week for the popular indie rock band from London. The album blared through the store’s speakers while attendees discussed their favorite songs. Noah Silver ‘26, a Macon native, is the owner of the record shop in Mercer Village, where Linden Avenue and Coleman Avenue meet. Each listener—of which there were only a handful on the afternoon of Halloween—left the shop with a poster and tote bag, which would typically come with a purchase, but since Silver “didn’t even have time to post the event,” he rewarded guests with these items for free.

Birmingham, AL | Seasick Records celebrating 12 years in Birmingham: …“I feel like I haven’t stopped moving for 12 years,” Drinkard explained. “In a great way, but also in a little bit of an exhausting way. I think that when we opened, I saw a need in Birmingham for a place like Seasick that would, you know, carry new music and highlight new artists. There wasn’t really a record store in town that was doing that at the time, and so I felt like there was a gap there that we needed to fill.” Seasick has moved four times since it opened in 2013 and has settled into its current location at 3131 5th Avenue South. “We’re still fresh into our new location. We’ve only been here a little over six months, and you know, we’re still kind of getting used to the space and filling it out and figuring out how to do things here, and how we can grow, and continue to make things better, and do more events, and find ways to connect with the community and give back in what little ways we can,” Drinkard said.

New Braunfels, TX | Locally owned record store expands in New Braunfels: Vintage record store Yard Sale Records—located at 800 S. Business I-35, Ste. 600—has nearly doubled in size after acquiring the neighboring suite in the strip mall in October. Yard Sale Records is locally owned by Howard Lovell, who opened the store in March 2024, as previously reported by Community Impact. The additional suite space adds “twice the fun” to the traditional record store experience and adds more space for anything music related Lovell said. “It’s just more space for everything that we’ve got,” Lovell said. Yard Sale Records sells a wide range of new and used vinyl records from various genres. The store also sells vintage memorabilia, CDs, cassette tapes, books and more. The record store also participates in vinyl markets and hosts performances from local artists.

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TVD Radar: Fields of the Nephilim, Dawnrazor reissue in stores 12/12

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Formed in 1984, Fields of the Nephilim is the creation of vocalist and front man Carl McCoy. Highly influential, especially in the world of goth, but also within the metal and electronic genres, their legacy endures to this day. You can hear their influence on bands like Swans, Godspeed! You Black Emperor, Explosions In The Sky, Wolves in The Throne Room, and more.

Dawnrazor is the band’s debut album, originally released in 1987. We are happy to announce a reissue of this title, out December 12th, remastered and available on CD and colored vinyl. The vinyl is pressed on white and is expanded to a double LP for improved fidelity. Several different versions of this album were initially released, featuring different track listings depending on what country you were in. This definitive version includes all 14 album tracks on vinyl for the first time and together on CD for the first time since the five album set.

The album’s opening track contains a sample of the Ennio Morricone theme “Man with the Harmonica” from Sergio Leone’s classic 1968 western film Once Upon a Time in the West. “Preacher Man” is an epic track that is often noted as one of the greatest goth songs of all time. Louder Sound wrote about the title track, saying “Its slow, menacing pace, complete with creepy otherworldly noises and stellar musicianship from the band take this to another level.”

In a remembrance of the album in 2017, The Quietus called their sound “music that sails into the multi-coloured waters of psychedelia” and Metal Hammer wrote that they “gave the UK scene a much-needed shot in the arm, revitalizing the sound by introducing metal’s power and urgency into the sonic mix.”

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TVD Radar: Cat Power, “The Greatest” 20th anniversary 10″ EP in stores 1/23

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Cat Power is celebrating the 20th anniversary of her milestone 2006 album, The Greatest, with “Redux,” a three-song EP arriving digitally and on 10” vinyl via Domino Recording Company on Friday, January 23, 2026. Pre-orders/pre-saves are available now.

Recorded by GRAMMY® Award-winning engineer and longtime collaborator Stuart Sikes (Loretta Lynn, The White Stripes) at Austin, TX’s Church House Studios with backing by Dirty Delta Blues—the all-star supergroup assembled for the world tour that followed The Greatest comprising guitarist Judah Bauer (The Jon Spencer Blues Explosion), keyboardist Gregg Foreman (The Delta 72, Jesse Malin), bassist Erik Paparozzi (Lizard Music), and drummer Jim White (Dirty Three, Hard Quartet)—”Redux” includes a brand new re-recording of James Brown’s chart-topping classic, “Try Me.” The track was among those first recorded by the singer-songwriter, otherwise known as, during the original sessions that produced but were never completed.

Redux also includes a stunning rendition of Prince’s iconic “Nothing Compares 2 U,” recorded in tribute to the late, great guitarist Teenie Hodges, a legendary member of The Memphis Rhythm Band that backed Cat Power on The Greatest and with whom she formed a close bond before his passing in 2014. The EP also includes a re-imagined version of one of the many standout tracks on The Greatest, Marshall’s own “Could We,” newly recorded in the arrangement that was performed live on The Greatest Tour with Dirty Delta Blues.

Next year will see Cat Power perform The Greatest in its entirety with a very special series of 20th anniversary live shows beginning February 12, 2026, at Houston, TX’s White Oak Music Hall and then traveling North America, Europe, and the United Kingdom through early November. For updates and ticket information, please visit catpowermusic.com/#tour.

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Graded on a Curve: Screaming Lord Sutch, Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends

Remembering Screaming Lord Sutch, born on this day in 1940.Ed.

This very heavy solo debut by renowned English loony Screaming Lord Sutch (aka the 3rd Earl of Harrow) comes with some very heavy baggage. And I’m not referring to the late Lord’s Heavy Friends, who included such rock luminaries as Jimmy Page, Jeff Beck, John Bonham, Noel Redding, and Nicky Hopkins.

No, I’m talking about the album’s deplorable reputation. A 1998 BBC poll crowned Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends the worst album of all time, to which I can only reply that the people polled did a grave injustice to Rick Wakeman’s The Six Wives of Henry VIII. And plenty of others have heaped scorn upon this benighted 1970 LP, which mortified just about everyone including the people who played on it.

Me, I think they’re being unfair. I rather like Lord Sutch and Heavy Friends, and not as kitsch either. The musicians who recorded the LP would go on to condemn it as a bunch of demos that should never have been released, but to my ears it sounds like rock’n’roll primitivism at its best. The album has a lovably raw-boned, one-take feel to it, and what it lacks in polish (there is no polish) it makes up for in pure bluster and monolithic garage rock raunch. If you’re a fan of “You Really Got Me,” Blue Cheer, the Troggs (and who isn’t a fan of the Troggs?), or any number of sixties garage bands, you’ll most likely dig what’s on offer here.

There’s no denying Sutch was a fascinating character, and that the world was a far more interesting place with him in it. He may have had no more connection with the peerage than the infamous Nazi broadcaster and English traitor Lord Haw-Haw, but during his time on this planet he recorded a whole slew of timeless horror rock classics (“Jack the Ripper,” “Murder in the Graveyard”), basically invented Alice Cooper’s shock-schlock stage act, and ran for Parliament innumerable times, both as a representative of the National Teenage Party and as the proud founder of the Official Monster Raving Loony Party (that he never won a Parliamentary seat is a sad commentary on the intelligence of your average English voter).

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TVD Radar: Colin Blunstone, One Year
And More: Live from Union Chapel
2CD +
DVD in stores 11/21

VIA PRESS RELEASE | One year ago, on November 25, 2024, legendary vocalist Colin Blunstone returned to London’s Union Chapel for a once-in-a-lifetime concert. Performing his landmark 1971 debut solo album One Year in its entirety…including “Say You Don’t Mind,” “Misty Roses,” and “Caroline Goodbye” alongside career favorites, Blunstone was joined by a full ensemble, featuring bandmates from the current Zombies lineup and former Strawbs, plus the Q Strings quartet for a spellbinding evening that instantly became part of his legacy.

Blunstone relates “On the 25th of November 2024 I performed my first solo album “One Year” live in its entirety for the first time at London’s Union Chapel. Looking back this was not an undertaking to be taken on lightly knowing that “One Year” encompasses so many different genres of music. With very little rehearsal time my solo band (Dave Bainbridge, Søren Koch, Chas Cronk and Steve Rodford) and the incredible Q Strings took on the challenge without a moment’s hesitation.”

Now, to honor that unforgettable night, Gonzo Distribution proudly presents Colin Blunstone: One Year And More – Live from Union Chapel, a strictly limited collector’s edition box set, available November 21, 2025. Pre-order the box set and more here.

This exquisite release is designed for true connoisseurs: a 2CD set + full concert DVD, capturing the complete Union Chapel performance in pristine audio and video. It features a luxurious gold foil–embossed box with a gold satin lining, and an exclusive 24-page booklet with never-before-seen photographs of the concert that brought One Year full circle. Each set includes an autographed and numbered certificate, underscoring its scarcity and value.

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Graded on a Curve:
Holy Fuck, LP

They’ve been described as Toronto’s “evil supergroup.” A foreign reviewer wrote of their, er, blasphemous band moniker, “the name is simple—this is like the best sex that you ever had, only better.” Lo-fi savants, keyboardists Brian Borcherdt and Graham Walsh produce clamorous, rhythm-heavy electronic rock without the use of laptops or programmed backing tracks—you won’t hear any looping or splicing, for example—preferring to use real drummers and bassists. They don’t practice. They’re more fun than a barrelful of gut-shot high-tech synthpop gadgetry.

Holy Fuck is a great rock ’n’ roll band.

And the proof lies in 2007’s LP, a non-stop thrill ride, or rather a series of thrill rides, which makes the album an amusement park. The price of admission is cheap. The rides are fast, melody plays second fiddle to punk rock propulsion, and Krautrock blitzkrieg “No sleep ‘til Warsaw” get-up and go, and the real drummers (Matt Schulz and Loel Campbell) and bass player (Michael Bigelow) keep things sounding organic. This band operates less on electricity than motor oil and elbow grease, although you never forget you’re listening to machines—it’s just that they’re all fuzz and sizzle, gadgets with dirty faces.

This is noise rock, cataclysm in chains, mayhem in harness, the frazzled dead end of unsanctified sound. You can practically smell the burning.

Holy Fuck have released four albums since LP, but I maintain that it’s the best of them—all raw power, with one plugged-in flamer setting fire to the next, social niceties and subtlety be damned, although it can’t be said that its nine songs are devoid of nuance—even the appropriately titled “The Pulse,” an almost six-minute gallop to the finish line that basically just pushes everything in front of it out of the way, has its little twists in turns, including a couple of brief slowdowns and what sound like some echoing vocals in the middle. And live opener “Super Inuit,” a straight-up Krautrock rave-up if ever I’ve heard one, stops for some breath and what sounds like vocals on its otherwise V2-fast flight towards the center of your mind.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 11/10/25

Vancouver, CA | From Digital to Disc: How Gen Zs are reshaping their music listening habits: Even with digital music available on streaming platforms like Spotify, Gen Zs are drawn to records. Vancouver’s oldest independent record store, Neptoon Records, looks a little different than it did 20 years ago. Back in the early 2000s, the store’s shelves were filled with CDs and cassette tapes, with a few vinyl records on display. Today the store has an abundance of records, which are now their main products. “Instead of people consuming new music via CD, they are consuming vinyl. So, half the store is filled with new vinyl,” said Ben Frith, co-owner of Neptoon Records. Frith along with his father Rob have been running the store since it opened in 1981. Ben has been engrossed with the family business all his life and has witnessed the shift in customers buying new albums released on vinyl.

Solihull, UK | Vinyl rock shop opens: Knowle gets niche music shop run by former mental health nurse: A rock and heavy metal-loving former NHS mental health nurse is opening a music shop for vinyl enthusiasts. John Ellis is launching Slow Century Records on Knowle High Street this Saturday (Nov 8). The shop will feature a curated selection of new and pre-loved records across the rock, metal, prog and alternative sounds genres. It will also stock musics from Midlands-based artists. John spent more than 20 years as mental health nurse across the West Midlands. …Slow Century Records is a chapter that brings John closer to home. “Music has always been about connection—whether that’s helping people through a tough time or sharing a record that means something,” said John. “Slow Century Records is about slowing down, listening properly and rediscovering the joy of music with other people.”

St. Louis, MO | Tom “Papa” Ray gives record stores their due with ‘Papa Ray’s Vintage Vinyl Roadshow.’ The PBS show from the DJ, musician, and owner of St. Louis’ Vintage Vinyl recently snagged two Mid-America Emmy nominations. Tom “Papa” Ray has never had to look far to find a friend—especially when there’s a record spinning in the background. …It’s this love of music and all things vintage that carved out an extraordinary life for Ray—and ultimately inspired him to create and host the PBS series Papa Ray’s Vintage Vinyl Roadshow, which airs Saturdays at 6:30 p.m. on Nine PBS. Since getting its start in 2019, the docuseries has notched two seasons and 12 episodes to its name, with its globe-trotting protagonist decamping from his Gateway City home base to such cultural hubs as Detroit, New York, Seattle, Atlanta, and even as far as the UK.

Los Angeles, CA | Hello, yellow brick road: Elton John thanks record store owner for random act of kindness. Elton John was recently reunited with an important artifact from his illustrious career. Elton posted on Instagram a photo of himself and Alex Rodriguez, who owns the LA record store Record Safari and curates vinyl for Coachella. In the photo, Alex is handing Elton an orange vinyl album in a plastic sleeve marked Trident. “Every so often, there are acts of kindness that remind you there are still a lot of good people in this world,” Elton captioned the post. “Alex Rodriguez … recently came across the original acetates from the first recordings of Goodbye Yellow Brick Road. They’re still in their Trident Studios sleeves, in beautiful condition—a real piece of history.” …”Instead of selling them or keeping them for himself, Alex reached out and offered to return them to me personally. While they’d be valuable to anyone, to me these recordings are truly priceless, and I am incredibly grateful for his kindness, generosity, and his love of music.”

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

I believe it’s homicide / I rest my case, don’t cast aside / You better believe it / That’s the truth of it / Take it or leave it / Resign to it

Homicide, homicide / Homicide, homicide

No one cared / When someone lied / They’d rather say / That it’s irrelevant / You better believe it / That’s the truth of it / Take it or leave it / Resign to it

Homicide, homicide / Homicide, homicide / Homicide, homicide / Homicide, homicide

I made it through Halloween safely. Big cities appear ready to “fight the power” at the polls, and some friends and I went to see The Saints with Mark Arm (Mudhoney) and Mick Harvey (Birthday Party).

Got to rock out with longtime friends Matt Green, Kevin Haskins, Sam Velde, and Laurel Stearns. All of us were delighted to check this special band off our live, punk rock bucket-list. All in all, a bit of hope, sunshine, and classic punk rock goes a long way.

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TVD Washington, DC

TVD Live: Jorma Kaukonen at the Warner Theatre, 11/1

Jorma Kaukonen doesn’t turn 85 until next month, but the celebrations have already begun, with the first of a handful of concerts that cover his lengthy career alongside a half dozen notable and rotating guest stars. His hometown show at the Warner Theatre in DC brought his longtime collaborator Jack Casady on bass, along with Jim Lauderdale, Steve Kimock, Cindy Cashdollar, harmonica player Ross Garren, and drummer Justin Guip in various configurations.

Kaukonen is the giant around whom all the music revolved, though he began the show solo. With his white hair and beard, he resembles something of a sage of the guitar by now. And though the world got to know him as the wild-haired young electric guitarist that powered Jefferson Airplane, he sat to exclusively fingerpick his acoustic guitar, as he did when he started the offshoot Hot Tuna with his old high school buddy and Airplane mate Casady more than half a century ago.

Kaukonen’s vocals aren’t as smooth or supple as they once were—indeed, he’s prone to adding little grunts and un-huhms at the end of a lot of lines in the manner of the old country blues players he so emulates. The clear emphasis, though, is on the finger work, which is nimble as ever, flying through songs that inspired him—particularly those from the bluesman Reverend Gary Davis, three of whose songs he performed, including “Death Don’t Have No Mercy.” “I first started playing this song at 19 or 20,” he said with a smile. “It has a lot more meaning to me today.”

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Musicality For Modern Humans: How To Listen Like An Artist by Craig Havighurst in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | “You don’t have to be a Michelin-starred chef to know when you are eating a spectacular meal. And you don’t need a doctorate in music theory to enjoy Bach, Eric Dolphy, or Stravinsky. In this beautifully written book, Craig Havighurst reminds us that with an active ear, we all have the potential to participate in the flight of great music.”Béla Fleck

Music journalist and broadcaster Craig Havighurst is proud to announce his new book, Musicality For Modern Humans: How To Listen Like An Artist, published this week through independent publisher The Sager Group. Inspired by more than 25 years of reporting on music and musicians in Nashville, Havighurst’s guide to the pursuit of musicality will inspire and inform readers of all levels, redefining music appreciation for the 21st century.

Musicality is a self-enrichment book about the inner game of sound-based art for curious people who wish they could get deeper into music, including those who feel confused, overwhelmed, or intimidated. It’s for anyone looking to shake up their habits, get free of algorithms, and listen for more in music across all genres and time periods.

For the past nine years, Craig has been Editorial Director at NPR affiliate WMOT 89.5 FM, where he hosts The String, a thought-provoking weekly interview show covering American roots music. He has reported on Americana music for NPR, The Tennessean, No Depression, Bluegrass Unlimited, Acoustic Guitar, The Wall Street Journal, and other leading outlets.

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Graded on a Curve:
Joni Mitchell,
The Reprise Albums (1968–1971)

Celebrating Joni Mitchell on her 82nd birthday.Ed.

After reports that her death was imminent in 2015 after she had an aneurysm, Joni Mitchell has risen, phoenix-like, to resume a somewhat normal life and even make public appearances, although she has difficulties walking.

Through Rhino Records, Mitchell has now embarked on the most ambitious and thus far fruitful archival reissue series of her long and illustrious career. She has never been a fan of greatest hits or archival releases, as she feels they can lead to a halt in sales of individual albums.

The initial batch of archival releases included Live At Canterbury House 1967 as a three-album vinyl set, recorded in Ann Arbor, Michigan; Early Joni as a single vinyl album; and Joni Mitchell Archives – Vol. 1: The Early Years (1963–1967), which included radio, television, live recordings, tapes, demos, and more previously unreleased material as well as the Live at Canterbury House 1967 performances available as a 5-CD set. There has also been the “Joni Mitchell Blue 50 (Demos & Outtakes)” Digital EP Flac release, which includes five previously unreleased recordings from the 1971 Blue sessions.

The latest release is Joni Mitchell The Reprise Albums (1968 – 1971) available as either a 4-CD set, or a limited edition of 10,000 copies, four-LP vinyl box set. The limited edition vinyl box set is beautifully packaged in a slip-case and features authentic gatefold replicas of her first four albums on 180 gram vinyl: Song To A Seagull (1968), Clouds (1969), Ladies Of The Canyon (1970) and Blue (1971).

Mitchell’s debut album is presented in a brand-new mix by Matt Lee, overseen by Mitchell, and all the albums have been remastered by Bernie Grundman. The cover art of the outer box is by Joni Mitchell and there is an essay included by Brandi Carlile. Carlile will actually be performing the entire Blue album at Carnegie Hall on November 7th. She has done this once before in Los Angeles at the Walt Disney Concert Hall in 2019.

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TVD Radar: The
Podcast with Dylan Hundley, Episode 196: Tytti Roto

I recently caught up with Tytti Roto, who’s been a big part of the Helsinki underground for years—you might know her from Rosettes, Modem, Plastic Tones, or Ty Roxy.

I met Tytti back in September when we played the same Synthicide night, and I was completely blown away by her and her band Modem. They’re a synth-pop duo she started with Ville Valavuo in 2020, drawing on their shared love of the electronic sounds of the ’80s.

When we talked, Tytti was in the studio working on the new Plastic Tones record—her first band—while Modem had just dropped their second full-length, Interface. And knowing her, I’m sure something’s cooking for Ty Roxy too.

Go check it all out: Modem via Don Giovanni Records, Ty Roxy via Fonal Records, and all things Tytti on Instagram.

Radar features discussions with artists and industry leaders who are creators and devotees of music and is produced by Dylan Hundley and The Vinyl District. Dylan Hundley is an artist and performer, and the co-creator and lead singer of Lulu Lewis and all things at Darling Black. She co-curates and hosts Salon Lulu which is a New York based multidisciplinary performance series. She is also a cast member of the iconic New York film Metropolitan.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
The Move,
Shazam

Celebrating Roy Wood in advance of his 79th birthday tomorrow.
Ed.

This is what fans of The Move call a masterpiece? You might it expect it to be, seeing as how it’s the product of the bizarre mind of professional eccentric Roy Wood, future co-founder of Electric Light Orchestra and founder of the glam rock band Wizzard. And that’s the major flaw of 1970’s Shazam–despite the presence of Wood, the album isn’t eccentric enough.

The Move take a scattershot approach on Shazam, delving into art rock, classical rock, raga rock, and proto-metal, while also taking stabs at The Beatles and sixties folk rock. But their most important influence is the Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band, and that’s where things fall apart. The Bonzo Dog Doo-Dah Band kept whimsical tongue firmly planted firmly in dada cheek, but on Shazam The Move want to have it both ways. They wander into Stanshall/Innes territory on a couple of cuts, but for the most part they play it straight. Shazam is a case of a split personality, and it’s too late for it to seek therapy.

“Cherry Blossom Clinic” makes the comedy grade, what with its light-hearted treatment of “they’re coming to take me away ha ha” lunacy, but the song is ruined for me by the extended foray into the music of Bach and Paul Dukas. Sure, it’s all in fun, but I don’t enjoy being classically gassed–if I wanted to listen to the likes of Bach I’d have to become a different person, because the person I am is bored stiff by the stuff.

Far less funny is the opening of the tender and very serious “Beautiful Daughter,” in which the band takes the same “talk to the man in the street” approach the Bonzo Dog Band employ in their masterpiece of absurdity “Shirts.” Trouble is, with the exception of the old women who responds to the question of whether she likes pop music by saying, “Well, it’s nice in its way, you know some of it, not uh, not when they go naked,” the Q and A just ain’t that funny. One laugh line doesn’t not a comedy classic make.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 11/7/25

London, UK | The world’s first museum of youth culture to open in the UK—and it has its own record store: With the pressures of modern life, many of us dream of stepping back in time and being a teenager again. And while we can’t be 19 forever, a new museum in London is set to take guests through a time machine to relive their carefree youth. The world’s first museum dedicated entirely to youth culture will open in London this December. …The museum will also house a café and a record store hosting exhibitions, talks, workshops and community events. The Museum of Youth Culture’s founder, Jon Swinstead, said: “This is more than a place to look back; it’s a space to participate, contribute, and shape the cultural narrative together. Camden has been synonymous with music and youth culture for decades, making it the natural home for the Museum.”

Washington, DC | Your Guide to 11 Record Stores in the DC Area: Where to spend a day sifting through new and used albums to build your vinyl collection. If you grew up in DC during the 1980s, you remember when record stores were popular and plentiful. You couldn’t walk a block in Georgetown or Dupont Circle without hitting at least one new- or used-­vinyl shop. Even in the wake of streaming services, you’d be mistaken if you thought record stores had gone the way of the dodo. Vinyl sales have rebounded enough that there’s still a healthy supply of independent stores in the Washington area. If you’re looking to drop a needle on some new-to-you tracks, follow these itineraries and pretend it’s the ’80s all over again.

Karachi, PK | Karachi’s hidden gem keeps vinyl culture alive: Vinyl and cassette culture may be slowly fading in Pakistan, but the nostalgia of old school music lives on. Vinyl and cassette culture may be slowly fading in Pakistan, but the nostalgia of old school music lives on. While stores like HMV abroad remain bustling hubs for music collectors, Karachi has its own small yet thriving scene for those who still love the charm of LPs and cassettes. For music enthusiasts, Saddar in Karachi hides a special spot where vinyl collectors and casual listeners can explore stacks of records, CDs, and record players. Tucked inside a cozy apartment in the Rainbow Center, the shop is a colorful haven for anyone passionate about music. …Collectors searching for rare gems will also find pristine albums from the 1970s, 1980s, and 1990s, offering a tangible connection to music history.

Haverfordwest, UK | Terminal Records, Haverfordwest, closes after 45 years: A Pembrokeshire shop that changed the lives of its customers closed Saturday, November 1, after more than 45 years in business. Terminal Records in Haverfordwest reached its terminus, with customers coming to say their goodbyes and share a glass of wine and a piece of cake as well as to say their goodbyes to owner and local legend Martin Thompson. Martin set up Terminal Records on September 6, 1980, when he hired a trestle table in the old Market Hall in Market Street, Haverfordwest. He was inspired by university friend, Hag Harries who opened a record shop in Lampeter and decided to follow suit. When the old market was demolished in 1982 Terminal Records moved to Haverfordwest’s new Riverside Market. Martin had an island shop there until the market was closed in 2016 to make way for the new library.

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TVD Live Shots:
Devo and The B-52s
at Germania Insurance Amphitheater, 11/1

WORDS AND IMAGES: DANA WALSH IN AUSTIN, TX | It was a night of nostalgia, energy, and pure joy as Devo and The B-52s took the stage at Germania Amphitheater in Austin. From the stormy build-up to the electric atmosphere inside, the evening was a rollercoaster of emotions that culminated in unforgettable performances by two iconic bands that helped define an era. Whether you were there to shimmy to “Love Shack” or lose yourself in the chaotic brilliance of “Whip It,” this show was a celebration of bold, unapologetic music that still feels as fresh and fun as ever. Curious how the night unfolded? Let me take you through the highs, the surprises, and the moments that made it magical.

Let me set the scene. The drive to the venue was a stormy adventure—rain on and off for nearly an hour and a half. When I finally pulled in (a solid three hours early), the sky looked ominous, heavy clouds rolling with flashes of lightning in the distance. Dread started to creep in, but I tried to stay hopeful.

About an hour before showtime, the storm hit full force. Then it stopped. Then it threatened again. So, we all waited it out in our cars, refreshing social media for updates. I got a text saying the show was delayed and that they’d keep us posted. A little relief, but still that nervous “what if” feeling. Half an hour later, I noticed a few people walking toward the stairwell where we were supposed to enter. I got out and crossed the lot to check with security. I’d barely been standing there thirty seconds when someone came over the guard’s radio: “They’re letting people in.”

Instant excitement. From our spot, you couldn’t see the main entrance, so it felt deserted—like maybe the storm had scared everyone off. Nope. Once inside, the place was packed. The air was electric, the crowd buzzing with relief and anticipation. The speakers blasted tracks straight out of my high school years, and the nostalgia was real. The anticipation built, and I couldn’t help thinking how much The B-52s and Devo had really helped shape that era. They were bold, bizarre, and utterly unapologetic about being different. We could use more of that today.

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