A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/22/26

Rochester, NY | Record stores see stretched lines for exclusive Taylor Swift, Nirvana, Record Store Day releases: Music lovers lined up around the block Saturday as Record Store Day brought a surge of energy, and customers, to local shops across Rochester. At the House of Guitars, crowds gathered early in search of limited releases, rare finds and a shared appreciation for vinyl. “It’s a day everyone looks forward to,” said store manager Aric Schaubroeck. “Every record company puts out something that people have been waiting for… and people are just excited to finally get it.” Schaubroeck said the turnout this year was especially strong, with a line stretching out the door and around the corner for hours. “It reminds me of the old midnight sales,” he said. Shoppers said the experience goes beyond just buying music, it’s about connection, nostalgia and discovery.

Indio, CA | Coachella 2026: How Record Safari became a staple for Record Store Day: At a festival defined by quick moments, Record Safari offers something a little more lasting. As festival goers weave through the music and desert heat at the Coachella Valley Music and Arts Festival, a different kind of experience awaits just steps from the entrance, one that trades booming speakers for the soft crackle of vinyl. Inside Record Safari, the festival’s on-site record store, fans flip through crates of new and used records, many stopping in during Record Store Day, which landed on Saturday, April 18, during Weekend 2 and continuing into Sunday as crowds make their final rounds. For Alex Rodriguez, the man behind Record Safari, the moment is the culmination of more than a decade spent building something that started almost by accident. “I was part of the Glass House in Pomona,” Rodriguez said. “One year, the people doing the record store at Coachella couldn’t do it, so they kind of scrambled and asked me…”

Burlington, NC | Main Street Vinyl celebrates Record Store Day: People line the street to attend the special sale in Burlington. Whether they were crate-digging for something rare or just soaking in the vibe, attendees lined the street bright and early for some fun. Burlington record store, Main Street Vinyl, participated in celebrating Record Store Day on Saturday, April 18th. Inspired by the nationally recognized day, the record store offered limited edition albums only available in independent record stores, as opposed to mainstream ‘box’ stores. Co-owner Ed Meyer highlighted the uniqueness of what they have to offer. “There is something special about everything released,” Meyer said. “A lot of it had never before been on vinyl. There are live concerts on vinyl and all kinds of different stuff like that.” Kate Meyer, Main Street Vinyl co-owner, said today is all about indie record stores and indie releases in support of both the artists and local businesses.

London, UK | Vinyl revival: Fans queue across the South East for Record Store Day 2026. Music enthusiasts across the South East proved that the physical record remains a cornerstone of British culture, as hundreds braved the early morning chill to participate in Record Store Day 2026. As reported by the BBC, the global event saw over 300 independent shops across the UK and Ireland open their doors to crowds seeking exclusive, limited-edition releases. In towns like Dorking, Surrey, the dedication was palpable. Fans began forming lines outside Spin Sounds on South Street as early as 04:00 BST, four hours before the shop’s 08:00 opening. Store owner Lee White observed a mixture of excitement and anxiety among the regulars. “People are nervous to know if they get what they want,” he noted, highlighting the high stakes involved when supply for popular titles is strictly limited.

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TVD Cleveland

TVD Live Shots: Fantastic Negrito
with Nat Myers at Mahall’s, 4/19

Fantastic Negrito turned Mahall’s into a full-on party Friday night, bringing a fiery mix of soul, funk, blues, and rock that had the crowd dancing from the jump.

Held in the smaller concert venue at Mahall’s, the close quarters only added to the energy, giving the night an intimate, anything-can-happen feel where the audience felt part of the show. Crowned in his signature feathered bucket hat, Negrito looked every bit the larger-than-life showman fans have come to expect. Standout moments included “I Hope Somebody’s Loving You” and “Hillbilly Love,” both delivered with grit, swagger, and a whole lot of heart and soul.

What made the set hit even harder was how fully engaged Negrito was with his band. He bounced across the stage to trade moves with bassist Bartosz Niebielecki, leaned shoulder-to-shoulder with keyboardist Bryan C. Simmons as the chords thundered out, locked into the groove with his touring guitarist (Clark Sims was not on this tour), and flashed a grin back at drummer James Small before every sharp turn in the set. It felt less like one man fronting a band and more like five musicians feeding off each other in real time.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: UK Subs, The Last Will and Testament of UK Subs 2LP gold vinyl in stores July 2026

VIA PRESS RELEASE | It’s half a century since punk rock first arose from the dark’n’dirty backstreets of London and New York… half a century since the Sex Pistols swore on prime time TV; the Ramones proved that great gigs could be played in 20 minutes; and the so-called giants of metal, prog, and virtuoso tomfoolery were swept away on a tsunami of high octane energy and incendiary rage.

The world would never be the same again, and Cleopatra Records will be celebrating that first burst of punkoid energy for the rest of the year. And why not? Over the last 30 years, the label has done as much as anyone to preserve and advance the first wave of punk rock giants.

From The Damned to Johnny Thunders & The Heartbreakers, and ex-Runaway Cherie Currie to late Sex Pistol Sid Vicious; from Eater and The Vibrators to The Dickies and The Germs, brilliant new releases and precious archive treasures alike have lit up the shelves, and every month through 2026, Cleopatra Records will be spotlighting a fresh classic from the catalog.

Last month it was a pair of raw live albums by New York’s Dead Boys, recorded back when it all began. This month, we leap forward almost half a century for London’s UK Subs, as they waved farewell to the scene they have ruled for so long with an absolutely epic live album—fittingly titled The Last Will and Testament of UK Subs.

Still fronted by ageless frontman Charlie Harper, along with longtime bassist Alvin Gibbs and newer members Steve Straughan and Stefan Häublein, the Subs’ thrilling, energetic performance includes everything you could positively need to hear.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
Iggy Pop,
The Idiot

Celebrating Iggy Pop on his 79th birthday.Ed.

David Bowie was a great artist, but he was also an appropriator and opportunist, and was not above exploiting his friends to achieve his own goals. Take Iggy Pop. Pop had been floundering since the Stooges dissolved, and found himself in Berlin with Bowie who, like Pop, was trying to fight both his drug demons and find his way to a new sound, which would emerge in 1977’s Low. But before Low he produced Pop, as much out of self-interest as friendship. As he would say later, “Poor Jim, in a way, became a guinea pig for what I wanted to do with sound.”

Fortunately for Pop, their creative collaboration—for their sessions were much, much more than Bowie’s simply using Pop as a laboratory animal for musical experimentation—resulted in 1977’s The Idiot, a work of genius and a radical departure from Pop’s frankly self-destructive proto-punk with the Stooges. Indeed, it was so radical it skipped punk entirely, and disappointed plenty of people who thought Pop should have been taking advantage of a sound and attitude he had helped to foment.

The Idiot would have been unthinkable to anyone familiar with Pop’s previous personae as rock’s wildebeest, who flung himself about to the frenetic roar produced by the Stooges, seemingly oblivious to the physical and psychic damage he was inflicting upon himself. On The Idiot, the roar of guitars was replaced by a funky and robotic foray into more Apollonian territory, with Pop singing over Kraftwerk-flavored art rock, quieter tunes some with Gothic overtones, and even proto-industrial electronica.

Most of its songs would be celebrated by proponents of the various genres of post-punk, demonstrating conclusively just how far ahead of its time it was. On a bummer of a note, it was even the soundtrack to Joy Division singer Ian Curtis’ suicide, as it was found spinning in the room where Curtis hanged himself.

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TVD UK

UK Artist of the Week: Slag

Brighton’s Slag (yes, that’s their name) is the kind of band that feels inseparable from the scene that shaped them. They are scrappy, instinctive, and thriving on momentum. Their debut EP “Losing” marks a defining step, and it’s out now via Big Scary Monsters.

Formed on the south coast and quickly embedded in its DIY circuit, the five-piece has built a reputation on energy first, polish second. Their sound sits somewhere between art-punk, indie, and something more restless; angular guitars, rhythmic left-turns, and vocals that swing between melody and half-shouted release. Their EP “Losing” captures a band figuring things out in real time, and making that uncertainty part of the appeal. Rather than smoothing out their edges, Slag lean into contrast: chaos and control, humour and vulnerability, noise and melody, all coexisting in the same space.

There’s also a sense of narrative running through the EP. Even in its most chaotic moments, “Losing” carries emotional weight, songs that tap into disorientation, release, and fleeting clarity without ever becoming overly introspective. It’s that balance that gives the project its edge. It feels immediate, but not shallow, instinctive, but not careless.

Still early in their trajectory, Slag sit in that exciting space where everything feels open-ended. “Losing” doesn’t present a finished identity, it documents a band in motion, testing ideas, pushing dynamics, and inviting listeners into the process. If this EP is anything to go by, they’re not interested in standing still.

“Losing” is in stores now via Big Scary Monsters.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve: Darling Black, “8th and Alvarado” (Youth “Champagne” Remix)

Dylan Hundley is a fixture on the scene in New York City and a crucial contributor to The Vinyl District, who’s also half of Lulu Lewis alongside Pablo Martin, her partner in life and also in new wave-post punk-darkwave groove science. With her “one woman brutalist synthpop” project Darling Black, Hundley is indeed going it alone, except when a top-flight remix specialist comes a-knockin’.

In the case of “8th and Alvarado,” a plum track from Darling Black’s eponymous full-length from last year, the remixer is Killing Joke bassist Martin “Youth” Glover. The Youth “Champagne” Remix is an exquisite expansion and extension of Hundley’s inspired conception, as evidenced below.

For those familiar with Lulu Lewis who have yet to get acquainted with Dylan Hundley’s latest endeavor, rest easy that Darling Black flaunts a complementary approach. The main differentiating factor is that Hundley is honing a sharp and edgy dancefloor attack throughout. That hasn’t registered as a major difference, at least until Youth got his hands on “8th and Alvarado.”

The core track is already a mover, but its no-wave-electro-post-punk blend conjures visions of a sweaty mass of unison writhing in a packed room during a live performance. After Youth got his mitts on the tune, the sound is thicker and is even more likely to whip a crowd into a frenzy, but now the mental picture that forms is of a heaving humid dance club with a DJ bent over a pair of spinning turntables.

As it is in Lulu Lewis, Hundley’s strong suit in Darling Black is a desire to enliven her inspirations with fresh possibilities rather than settling for mere imitation. Everything connects as correct, including this version by Youth.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/21/26

Dickson City, PA | Fans of vinyl line up early for Record Store Day in Dickson City: Kim Stenlake arrived at Dickson City’s Gallery of Sound before sunrise on Saturday, with a list of vinyl albums she hoped to purchase, with Bruce Springsteen’s music topping the entries. Stenlake, like thousands of vinyl aficionados across the country and across the world, was participating in Record Store Day, an annual global celebration that sees hundreds of artists release special, limited-edition vinyl, CDs and promotional items exclusively for the day. For Stenlake, of Moosic, the day was not only about music, but about family. Her son Eric Scritchfield and granddaughter Khloé Scritchfield, 9, stood beside her in a line that spanned the entire walkway and overflowed into the shopping area’s parking lot. “Today was a big day,” Stenlake said. “My son called to remind me about it.”

Portland, ME | Record Store Day spins into Portland music stores: Music lovers shopped exclusive records and deals during Saturday’s event. Sam Harmon browsed records at Bull Moose in South Portland on Saturday morning, a squirrel-adorned tote bag from Boston’s Beacon Hill Books and Cafe swinging on her shoulder. She expertly thumbed her way through various records—though she is a Boston resident, attending Record Store Day in Maine is a tradition for Harmon and her friend, Wells resident Leanne Brennan. “We both love music,” Harmon said Saturday. …This year, Harmon browsed on Record Store Day simply for the fun of it. But when Brennan caught up to her in Bull Moose on Saturday, she was holding a couple of records: the soundtrack to George Clooney-fronted film “O Brother, Where Art Thou” and something by PeeWee Herman. Earlier in the day, Brennan had scored an exclusive record from Southern Gothic singer-songwriter Ethel Cain. “It was the last one left,” she said. “But I almost always find something.”

Huntsville, AL | Huntsville record store sees biggest turnout yet for Record Store Day: Vertical House Records at Lowe Mill drew large crowds for special vinyl releases. Music lovers lined up at Vertical House Records at Lowe Mill on Saturday for National Record Store Day. The store offered special records released to independent stores in honor of the day, in addition to their regular inventory. “Definitely popular, like Taylor Swift, Ethel Cain. There was like a Slipknot record. Sorry, I’m trying to think of all of them. But there was a lot, for sure. But Billy Strings was a popular one. Sturgill Simpson had something as well. But yeah, there was probably about like 200 releases. So there was definitely quite a few,” said Andy Vaughn, co-owner of Vertical House Records. The owners said they had a large line throughout the day. This was their biggest Record Store Day yet.

Stockton, UK | Vinyl fans queue for exclusive Record Day releases: Vinyl fans have queued throughout the night to get their hands on limited edition records made exclusively for independent shops celebrating Record Store Day (RSD) UK. Regency Records in Stockton was one of six independent shops in north-east England taking part in the event, and the only one outside Newcastle. The crowd began to gather at 20:30 BST on Friday night and Simon Pearson, who was first in line, said the event was good for the area because it was “like a community centre but with music”. The annual celebration of independent record shops was set up in the USA in 2007 with the first official event taking place the following year. RSD’s organisers said thousands of record shops across the world now took part, with more than 300 in the UK and Ireland.

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TVD Washington, DC

TVD Live: Jake Xerxes Fussell and Sam Amidon at Union Stage, 4/11

Despite the flashiest outward appearances of popular music, spinning into the future drenched in electronica, glitter, and maybe penned by robots, some artists still pride themselves on kicking the backroads for inspiration.

Discovering old tunes like fossils underfoot, drawn to their ancient longings, hard-won truths, and surprising turns and mysteries, these prospecting musicians dust them off, clean them up, and bring their own perspectives, finally presenting them to living, breathing audiences who otherwise might not have heard of them.

North Carolina’s Jake Xerxes Fussell is one of them, sitting unfussily on a chair at Union Stage in Washington, DC, last weekend, picking out old blues, gospel spirituals, and field hollers from a variety of sources. His opener, for example, “Jump for Joy,” was a cover from someone the nation should remember, if not those in the city of his birth, Duke Ellington. “He’s from down here, I believe,” Fussell commented before covering someone equally surprising, the UK’s Nick Lowe and “I Love the Sound of Breaking Glass” with a relaxed approach that made the jaunty new wave hit at first unrecognizable.

But mostly, he seemed to set his wayback machine to the early days of regional recordings in the South, when homegrown musicians came up with songs they might have heard from bluesmen busking on a downtown street, or from their own grandparents’ porch, or from church choirs trying out arcane practices like shape note singing. In those days, there was time to celebrate a “Jubilee,” to mention one song title, or take up the suggestion to go “Donkey Riding” (which may have referred to a 19th-century steam engine and not the mammal).

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Miles Davis, Miles ’56: The Prestige Recordings 4LP, 3CD sets in stores 6/19

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Craft Recordings continues its year-long centennial celebration of one of the 20th century’s most important cultural icons—trumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davis—with a brand-new box set, Miles ’56: The Prestige Recordings. Building upon Craft’s GRAMMY® Award-winning Miles ‘55 release, this latest collection focuses on Davis’ 1956 sessions for Prestige Records, which resulted in such landmark albums as Cookin’, Relaxin’, Workin’, and Steamin’, and features an all-star line-up of talent, including John Coltrane, Sonny Rollins, Red Garland, Art Taylor, Paul Chambers, Tommy Flanagan, and Philly Joe Jones.

Arriving on June 19, Miles ‘56 will be available as a limited-edition 4-LP box set, a 3-CD set, and in Hi-Res digital. All audio was transferred from the original analog tapes and meticulously restored by Plangent Processes. The collection was remastered by GRAMMY Award-winning engineer Paul Blakemore and lacquers were cut for the 180-gram vinyl LP edition by Kevin Gray at Cohearent Audio. Produced by Nick Phillips, both physical editions include a new essay by GRAMMY Award-winning music historian Ashley Kahn.

Track notes by the late Dan Morgenstern, a GRAMMY Award-winning jazz historian and archivist, add additional insight into the 70-year-old recordings. Additionally, a limited run of merchandise featuring the iconic artwork from Workin’, Cookin’, Relaxin’, and Steamin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet will be available exclusively through the Craft store.

For trailblazing trumpeter, bandleader, and composer Miles Davis (1926–1991), 1956 was a pivotal year, centered around his first consistent group, The Miles Davis Quintet. Formed just a few months earlier, the band—known as the “First Great Quintet”—featured a who’s who of rising stars, including tenor saxophonist John Coltrane, pianist Red Garland, bassist Paul Chambers, and drummer Philly Joe Jones. Together, they would become a defining force of the hard bop era.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
The Cure,
Songs of a Lost World

Celebrating Robert Smith in advance of his 67th birthday tomorrow.Ed.

Forty-six or so years after releasing their 1979 debut Three Imaginary Boys, and sixteen years after releasing their last album, 2008’s 4:13 Dream, The Cure did something my Robert Smith-phobic friends dreaded they’d do–came back. Those sixteen years had led many to hope Smith’s Reign of Mope was over. They were wrong and I’m glad, because 2024’s Songs of a Lost World isn’t just a great comeback album–it’s a great album period.

A masterpiece even. And who releases a masterpiece almost half a century into their career? It’s a miracle, really.

Songs of a Lost World is powered by big, ambitious, and somber yet soaring songs, and it’s tremendous despite the fact that there isn’t a single giddy-making pop confection like “Just Like Heaven” or “Friday I’m in Love” or “In Between Days” on it. Instead, Songs of a Lost World is a somber, emotionally and musically powerful meditation on growing old—that lost world in the title is the one we’re living in and losing, day by passing day, as we close in on death.

Songs of a Lost World is near perfect—symphonic, dramatic (natch), and replete with long and lovely instrumental introductions. But it’s not without its rock pleasures—Reeves Gabrels (of Tin Machine fame) makes sure of that with some astounding guitar work, especially on electric powerhouses “Warsong” and “Drone:Nodrone.” And Jason Cooper’s drumming is John Bonham heavy.

As for Smith, he’s in amazing voice—think about someone like Bob Dylan and then think about how Smith doesn’t sound like he’s aged a year. The man is growing old (66) and has intimations of mortality on his mind, and he’s not just contemplating his own demise—one of the more powerful songs on the LP (“I Can Never Say Goodbye”) is about the death of his brother.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Local H,
As Good As Dead 30th anniversary reissue in stores summer 2026

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Local H today have announced the 30th anniversary reissue of their iconic, breakthrough album As Good As Dead, out this summer via G&P Records. Originally released in 1996, the reissue is band-approved and features a brand new remaster. Featuring seminal tracks (“Bound For The Floor,” “Eddie Vedder,” “Hi-Fiving MF,” and more), exclusive artwork, and surprise extras—this is the ultimate edition of this essential classic. The As Good As Dead 30th Anniversary Edition is available now for pre-order.

On the heels of successful tours with Everclear and Filter, Local H will also be embarking on a full US tour with Toadies, including dates at NYC’s Webster Hall (5/21), Chicago’s Vic Theatre (5/31), LA’s The Belasco (6/13), and more.

Guitarist/vocalist Scott Lucas explains: “I never really used to care about the past. For me, it was always about moving forward. ‘Don’t look back’ and all that. And when it came to As Good As Dead, I had even more of a ‘fuck that’ attitude towards it.

Lately though, I’ve learned to relax about it. I’ve come to appreciate people’s personal affection for it. Especially the younger people who have been coming to the shows the last couple of years. They’re still excited about the record and their excitement is infectious.

But earlier this year, I was rather rudely awakened to how little respect others have for the record. And how little respect they have for our role in creating it. Big surprise! There’s a whole cottage industry of people—who have absolutely NO ties to the bands—putting out substandard releases of their records. And we’ve got no say in the matter.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
James Chance and the Contortions, Buy

Remembering James Chance, born on this date in 1953.Ed.

Of all of the bands that came out of New York City’s No Wave music scene, my faves have always been James Chance (aka James White) and the Contortions. The Contortions combined the atonal jazz skronk of Chance’s blurting and squealing alto saxophone with broken-glass-sharp shards of guitar, played atop one very funky bottom. I preferred Chance because you could actually dance to his music, agitated as it was, because in his own special way he never abandoned that James Brown groove—he just tortured it a bit.

How Chance’s sax stands up to that of “serious” jazz players is open to debate; while he briefly studied under the great David Murray, I think of Chance as an outlier, what with his brief tenure in Teenage Jesus and the Jerks, James Brown screams, nihilistic world view, and frequently antagonistic interactions with the very people who paid money to see him play live. These very “punk” attributes certainly separated him from the likes of his free jazz contemporaries, whose style he incorporated into his own playing. But the bottom line, when it comes to comparisons between Chance and the many other purveyors of free jazz is this: Can the guy actually play his horn, of is he just one very ballsy but amateurish poseur?

I asked my brother Jeffrey, a world-renowned free jazz expert, and this is what he said: “Regarding James Chance, I’m not quite sure where to rank him. Sonically, his alto falls neatly in the Luther Thomas/Noah Howard/Albert Ayler range. Chops-wise, I don’t think there’s a big enough pool of recorded material, especially material where he really stretches out, to see how good he really is, or could have been. That said, I think he’s ridiculously interesting, and captivating, as a soloist. What may have started as a joke, or a goof, very well could have morphed into something far greater.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/20/26

Bel Air, MD | Fans camp out at Bel Air record store ahead of Record Store Day to buy rare and exclusive vinyl: Vinyl enthusiasts are lining up early at REB Records in Bel Air to secure rare releases as vinyl sales continue to top $1 billion annually. Music lovers are already camping out at REB Records in Bel Air ahead of Record Store Day to get their hands on rare vinyl releases. The unofficial holiday celebrates music on vinyl and the independent stores that sell it. Sales do not start until 8 a.m. Saturday, but dedicated fans are already waiting outside the store. Haley Holleman, who was third in line, said she is looking for specific rare releases. …Gerry Wills, who was second in line, explained why he prefers the sound of vinyl over digital formats.

Seattle, WA | Record Store Day 2026 sights at Easy Street: As we previewed last night (when music fans were already getting in line), doors opened at 7 am this morning at Easy Street Records for the biggest day of the year: Record Store Day. We stopped by at 7:40 am, when the line was still wrapped around the block past the Wells Fargo parking lot on 44th Ave SW. The weather was clear and pleasant and spirits were high. Many of those in line told us that their shopping list included the “Brandi Carlile Live at Easy Street Records Volume II” record (a followup to the Grammy winner’s first live album recorded at the store almost 20 years ago). The album contains recordings from her band’s performance at Easy Street last October. Yesterday, the band stopped by the store…

Buffalo, NY | Local shop celebrates Record Store Day 2026: Saturday was the biggest day of the year for vinyl collectors. Collectors lined up for exclusive drops at Revolver Records as the shop celebrated Record Day 2026. Eric Buchbinder, Revolver Records manager, said the day was all about encouraging collectors to shop local. “It’s an important day to help support local indie record stores, you know, that’s the whole point of the holiday,” Buchbinder said. “You know, we have exclusive titles that nobody else has, none of the big box stores have. You know it’s just a day to support us.” A few of the artists featured in today’s drops included Pink Floyd, Taylor Swift and Olivia Dean. Shoppers can expect more exclusive drops coming to the shop later this year on Black Friday.

Billings, MT | Record Store Day spins success for Billings store amid vinyl revival: Music fans lined up before sunrise Saturday outside Cameron Records in Billings, some waiting overnight, as Record Store Day drew crowds eager for limited-edition vinyl releases. By the time the doors opened at 8 a.m., more than 200 people had gathered outside the independent shop, reflecting a growing demand for records that store owner TJ Goodwin said continues to build each year. “Record Store Day is a worldwide holiday,” Goodwin said. “It was established to celebrate the community of independent record stores and what they bring to their community.” The annual event, founded more than 15 years ago, now includes more than 1,200 participating stores nationwide. …At Cameron Records, nearly 200 exclusive titles were stocked this year, ranging from major artists like Bruno Mars and Madonna to niche and independent releases. Many sold out quickly.

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The TVD Storefront

Happy Record Store Day!

A look at events across the globe today.

Milton Keynes, UK | Biggest Record Store Day yet planned for Off the Record MK this Saturday: Willen Hospice’s independent music shop, Off the Record, is proud to be part of Record Store Day 2026 this Saturday (18 April), with more than 800 limited-edition albums on offer. Record Store Day is a global, annual event celebrating the culture, community and creativity that independent record shops bring to towns and cities. It features exclusive releases, live performances and special promotions that bring music fans together. Based in Midsummer Place, Off the Record will once again be opening early at 8am on Record Store Day to offer music fans exclusive, limited-edition vinyl releases on a first-come, first-served basis.

Madison, WI | How Madison’s record stores prepare for vinyl’s biggest day: Evan Woodward remembers rifling through crates of records at Strictly Discs during Record Store Day, before he started working there in 2010. “It wasn’t like what it is now,” he recalled. “There aren’t any other days like this.” Now Strictly Discs’ manager, Woodward pores over Excel spreadsheets listing thousands of records the store will receive in anticipation of the day, which takes place on April 18. He and the Strictly team need to catalog and alphabetize the anticipated 3,300 records they’ll receive, then set up and break down the staging area they’ll assemble on the block as people line up to nab exclusive releases. …Preparing for the day requires months of work. “It’s a big effort that just a small number of people are doing,” said Woodward. “It’s kind of like an extreme version of our job.” He estimates around 2,000 people will come through Strictly Discs’ doors on the 18th.

Phoenix, AZ | Record Store Day 2026 is almost here. How to celebrate in Phoenix: …The annual celebration is back for its 19th year on Saturday, April 18, taking place at independent brick-and-mortar record stores around the world, including many here in metro Phoenix. This year’s Global Record Store Day Ambassador is Bruno Mars, who happens to be playing two concerts in Glendale as we head into the weekend. In announcing his ambassadorship in a video shared on social media, shot at Moondog Records in Las Vegas, Mars shared some thoughts on what makes record stores so special. “Why record stores are so important is because you get the chance to immerse yourself, surround yourself with music,” he said. “I love being able to physically be surrounded by music. Not just staring at your phone and downloading something or listening to something on your phone, but to actually see all of this beautiful art around you. It inspires me.”

London, UK | All the London record shops taking part in Record Store Day 2026 (and the best deals): Time Out’s guide to the most unmissable Record Store Day events in London on Saturday April 18 2026, from free vinyl giveaways to club nights. When Record Store Day started out in 2007, it really did feel like vinyl might be on the way out: thousands of independent music traders were closing their doors as fans fled to cheaper (but less magical) digital ways of consuming their fave bands. These days, it’s more like a victory lap for the fantastic record shops that have created whole scenes around themselves, and become sites of pilgrimage for loyal customers. This year’s event falls on Saturday April 18, and as ever, it’ll be a stellar excuse to beat a path towards your local store for exclusive releases, and perks including free bevvies.

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The TVD Storefront

Audio Technica has your plan for what comes after Record Store Day

It’s that time of year again.

Record Store Day is Saturday, April 18, and if you know, you know—the lines, the crates, the early morning coffee runs, the thrill of walking out with something you’ve been hunting for. There’s nothing else quite like it in the music world.

But every year, RSD also attracts a new wave of listeners just getting started. First-timers. People who’ve been meaning to set up a turntable for years and finally pulled the trigger. And the question they’re all asking is the same one it’s always been: Where do I even start?

For a lot of those listeners, the answer starts with Audio-Technica. Founded in 1962 by Hideo Matsushita out of a small Tokyo apartment, the company has spent over six decades doing one thing exceptionally well—making great audio accessible to everyone. Turntables, cartridges, headphones, microphones. Bedroom setups and broadcast booths. If you’ve been in this hobby for any length of time, you already know the name.

Ahead of Record Store Day, I got my hands on two of their latest: the AT-LP70XBT Bluetooth turntable and the AT-SP3X powered speakers. I also sat down with Kurt Van Scoy, Audio-Technica’s VP of Products, Business Alliances & Marketing, to talk about where the company came from, what these products are built to do, and what he makes of the vinyl moment we’re all living through right now.

No frills on the packaging—just clean, functional, and everything well protected inside. Directions were right there, easy to follow. Audio-Technica isn’t trying to sell you an unboxing experience. They’re trying to sell you a turntable. I respect that.

First thing I noticed out of the box: lighter than I expected. But don’t let that fool you—this thing is well built. Solid, confident, no wobble or flex anywhere. The hinged dust cover snapped on first try. No fussing, no loose hinges, no missing hardware. If you’ve ever wrestled with a budget table’s dust cover, you know exactly why that matters.

Setup, for a small home office situation, was genuinely painless. The AT-LP70XBT pairs over Bluetooth—no additional wires required—and the connection established quickly and without drama. In an era where “easy setup” is a marketing promise that often proves aspirational rather than accurate, this one delivered. The turntable was spinning within minutes of coming out of the box.

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