The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
Maisy Owen,
Dark on a Sunny Day

Maisy Owen is a singer-songwriter and multi-instrumentalist based in that musical hub of Nashville, TN. After debuting with a 7-inch last October, she is releasing her debut long-playing record on classic black vinyl on May 1 through Tompkins Square. Dark on a Sunny Day is an assured set that excels through nimble fingerpicking, sturdy string bowing, and boldness of voice. The connection of folk music’s rich, long tradition is readily apparent.

As Dark on a Sunny Day unfolds, the songs are engaging and fresh while avoiding the tentative. Opener “My Youth Is All for You” connects like a tune that’s been passed down from older generations while eschewing the dustiness of a relic. Unsurprisingly released as Owen’s first single on a vinyl 45 in stereo and mono versions (copies still available), the track establishes a timelessness the artist alternately embraces and keeps at arm’s length.

“Letters” sounds like it could’ve been dished out solo for a few coffeehouse diehards on a slow, chilly New England weeknight, but this guitar and vocal core (this idyllic folk vision) gets fortified with bass played by the album’s producer Robin Eaton and viola that’s credited to Owen. The title track is a sturdier strummer, with some gentle electric fuzz tones in the weave. The drumming of John Radford gives the song a folk-rock feel that’s appealingly casual.

“The Rest of Me” exudes the gorgeous fragility of the best of Brit-folk, wispy gal picking and intoning on a haybale division, but sorta miraculously without affectation. “On My Way Down” is a more forceful affair, Owen strumming alone in singer-songwriter mode save for Eaton’s bass.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/28/26

Brooksville, FL | Grandaddy Records & Vintage debuts in Brooksville: More than a decade ago, independent record store owners kickstarted a day to celebrate their groovy enterprise and keep analog music alive. …One of those openings came through this year with Brooksville-based Grandaddy Records & Vintage. Tyler Mauriello launched the store on Feb. 1 alongside his partner, Sydney Brown. Mauriello said he fell in love with the quaint downtown vacancy on Broad Street and constantly imagined how it could be “the coolest little record shop.” When Mauriello saw a “For Rent” sign plastered out front, that was his calling. “I was like, ‘No freaking way,’ and that was what really kickstarted it,” Mauriello told Creative Loafing Tampa Bay.

Houston, TX | Go Crate Digging At The 10 Best Record Stores In Houston: Prepare for your next needle drop at the best record stores in Houston: from speakeasy listening lounges to city institutions. Record Store Day 2026 drops this weekend. Whether you’re hoping to score re-issues, B-sides, and live recording—or are simply seeking to stack your own catalogue with personal favorites, check out our list of the best record stores in Houston. From staples of Houston’s counterculture to hip brunch spots, speakeasies, and more: here are the best vinyl stores in Houston. 1. Sig’s Lagoon: Nestled in the company of Double Trouble Caffeine & Cocktails, Tacos A Go Go, and The Continental Club in Midtown, Sig’s Lagoon is a seriously stacked two-story Houston record store. In addition to over 10,0000 new and used vinyl, Sig’s offers a range of CDs, books, art, t-shirts, and collectibles…

Newburyport, MA | This Newburyport record store just turned 50. Here’s their secret. “I have customers who’ve been coming in since the ’70s, who have literally explored a lifetime of music—their lifetime of music—right through that store.” John Coyle still remembers the first vinyl he ever bought at Newburyport’s Dyno Records, back when an $8 Elvis Costello album was an extravagant buy for a local kid with a paper route. Decades (and countless LPs) later, Dyno is celebrating its 50th anniversary with Coyle on the other side of the counter as the shop’s latest owner. “I’ve been afforded an opportunity to sort of caretake this place into the future,” he reflected roughly 10 months into his tenure. “I have customers who’ve been coming in since the ’70s, who have literally explored a lifetime of music—their lifetime of music—right through that store.”

Schenectady, NY | New record store takes over space on Jay Street in Schenectady: A new record store has made its way to Schenectady. Party Shark Records has opened in the former space of The Re-Collector on Jay Street. The record store, located at 167 1/2 Jay Street, is currently focused on selling used and vintage physical media. Owner Scot Seguine said most of the floor space is occupied by records, but CDs and tapes are also for sale. The shop also buys used music from any community members who may be looking to clear up some space. Seguine said the opportunity to open the vintage media shop naturally fell into place. He was in search of a new job opportunity just as the the owner of The Re-Collector was looking to get out of the business. “So I decided to get weird and own a store instead of job hunting,” Seguine said.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Grateful Dead, Workingman’s Dead (Rhino High Fidelity) reissues in stores now

VIA PRESS RELEASE | On June 14, 1970, the Grateful Dead released Workingman’s Dead, an album that was unlike anything they’d ever done, one that showed the world a new side of the Dead.

It was clearly the same band as before, but now with a distinctly different sound and approach to the music, pivoting from psychedelic improvisation to folk-rock storytelling for the “everyman,” as the album’s title suggests. Today, Rhino High Fidelity presents new audiophile editions of the album on reel-to-reel and vinyl, plus Mickey Hart’s 2023 Atmos mix, available on Blu-ray for the first time.

Workingman’s Dead (Rhino High Fidelity) was cut from the original master tapes by Kevin Gray and pressed on 180-gram black vinyl at Optimal in Germany. It features glossy gatefold packaging with newly written liner notes by author and Grateful Dead historian David Gans. The album is limited to 5,000 individually numbered copies and available exclusively at Rhino.com and select Warner Music Group stores internationally.

In the liner notes, Gans says the songs reflect a more direct, stripped-down approach, calling them “concise, countrified, and catchy as hell.” As bassist Phil Lesh recalled in his autobiography Searching for the Sound, the shift moved the Dead “from the mind-munching frenzy of a seven-headed fire-breathing dragon to the warmth and serenity of a choir of chanting cherubim.”

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul in cinemas 6/17

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Subtext, in association with Rolling Stone Films, proudly announces the highly anticipated domestic theatrical release of Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul on Wednesday, June 17, including one-week engagements in Los Angeles and New York as well as one-night exclusive screenings across the country. Directed by GRAMMY® and Golden Globe Award-winning filmmaker James Keach, the full-length feature documentary explores the life and work of Gregg Allman, one of the most distinctive voices in American music and, as co-founder and frontman of the Allman Brothers Band, a groundbreaking architect of Southern rock.

Two premiere events will take place ahead of the film’s theatrical release. The first, on June 9 at New York City’s Gramercy Theatre, will feature a special acoustic performance by Devon Allman and Duane Betts. The second will be held on June 11 at the Grand Opera House in Macon, GA, and will include a special appearance by Chuck Leavell. Both events will include a screening of the film along with a Q&A with members of the filmmaking team.

Gregg Allman: The Music of My Soul offers a profound portrait of Gregg Allman, a luminous figure whose life and songs mirror his struggles and salvation. This visionary music documentary traces Allman’s turbulent, transcendent journey through profound personal tragedy and hard-won redemption—from a childhood ruptured by his father’s murder to the soulful emergence that birthed Southern rock and permanently reshaped American music.

Told through archival recordings, candid interviews, and electric live performances, the film weaves an intimate portrait of Allman, honestly reflecting on the death of his brother and bandmate Duane, his battles with addiction, and the personal demons that shaped both his life and his blues-driven music. The documentary is anchored by rarely seen concert footage that captures the Allman Brothers Band at their creative peak, offering audiences an immersive, front-row view of one of rock ‘n’ roll’s most powerful live outfits.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
Kiss, Kiss

Remembering Ace Frehley, born on this day in 1951.Ed.

The passing of Kiss guitarist Ace Frehley on October 16, 2025, marks the perfect time to take stock of a band that was more than a band—they were a worldwide pop culture phenomenon, like Elvis or The Beatles or Wang Chung’s “Everybody Have Fun Tonight.” Yet their best album was a double live album; they recorded only a small handful of songs that the average person can name off the top of their head, and even an easy sell such as myself would not call them a great rock ’n’ roll band.

No, what made Kiss the most famous band in the world was spectacle, and in the rocket’s red glare department, humanity has never seen anything like them. In their stage make-up and outrageous outfits, they conquered the planet, thanks in equal part to a shock-rock stage show that included fire-breathing, blood-spitting, pyrotechnics, smoking guitars, shooting rockets, and a levitating drum kit. They took Glam Rock and turned it into a cartoon, and by so doing made David Bowie and Alice Cooper look like underachievers.

Why, the boys themselves told a story about how their seven-inch stack-heeled boots were so skyscraper high that one of the guitarists (I forget which) was always toppling over on stage, and how they actually had to make his falling flat on his ass part of the stage act. And the one time I saw them, it didn’t matter that their music didn’t do anything for me—I was so caught up in the blood and the explosions and the rest of the extravaganza, the music was an afterthought.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Ramones to honor their landmark debut album with 50th anniversary celebrations

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Fifty years ago today, the Ramones ignited the punk rock revolution with the release of their debut, self-titled album, Ramones.

Fast, loud and relentless, Joey Ramone (vocals), Johnny Ramone (guitar), Dee Dee Ramone (bass), and Tommy Ramone (drums) cut through the era’s excess with a brash attitude and a set of songs; “Blitzkrieg Bop,” “Judy is a Punk” and a dozen other short, combustible, stripped-down but groundbreaking blasts—that were like nothing else at the time.

“Punk rock started in 1976 on New York’s Bowery, when four cretins from Queens came up with a mutant strain of blitzkrieg bubblegum,” said Rolling Stone, when naming Ramones the #1 Greatest Punk Album of All Time (later naming it the #1 Best Debut Album of All Time). “But even if punk rock began as a kind of negation—a call to stark, brutal simplicity—its musical variety and transforming emotional power was immediate and remains staggering.”

In the five decades that have passed, “the album’s influence has been incalculable” (The New York Times), and the Ramones’ music reaches more ears today than ever before. To mark the occasion, the Ramones and Rhino are beginning a series of year-long festivities to not only celebrate the record’s generational legacy, but to honor the birth of a genre and the Rock & Roll Hall of Famers’ enduring impact on this global grassroots movement. From punk to pop to the perennially cool, music and style have never been the same since.

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The TVD Storefront

Graded on a Curve:
Los Bravos,
Black is Black

How is it possible that a Spanish pop group with a German lead singer, living under the quasi-fascistic military dictatorship of Generalissimo Francisco Franco, managed to score a Top Five single in the UK and the US? Was the Generalissimo a secret garage rock fan? Did he think The Kingsmen were the mierda?

I guess we’ll never know, but the fact remains that Los Bravos, whose lead singer Mike Volker Kogel (aka Mike Kennedy, Mike Keller) was coerced into moving to Spain by a Spanish band called The Runaways he ran across in Cologne, who then changed their name to Los Bravos and scored big internationally with “Black is Black,” one of the catchiest pop songs (you’ll know it if you hear it if you don’t know it already) released during the summer before the Summer of Love.

It’s got Swinging London written all over it, but it was written and recorded by a band (in addition to Kogel they were Antonio Martinez on guitar, Pablo Gomez on drums, Miguel Danus on bass, and Manuel Fernández on organ) that was based in Madrid and would have undoubtedly have ended up in prison (the concentration camps were history) had they written a song called “The Generalissimo Can Eat Me.”

So far as I know, Los Bravos never toured the UK or the US, but they were so popular in Spain they were the subject of two film comedies, 1967’s Los chicos con las chicas and 1968’s ¡Dame un poco de amooor…! I haven’t seen either, but Columbia Records released the soundtracks to both films. The former includes the frantic and very fuzzed-out “Going Nowhere,” on which Kogel barks out each word in a military cadence that would have made Franco proud. The latter includes the fuzz-guitar and organ garage-freakout “Like Nobody Else,” a stellar example of Authoritarian Groovy.

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/27/26

UK | Record Store Day UK sales up 25% in record-breaking year: Over 300 independent record shops took part in this year’s event. Sales on last weekend’s Record Store Day in the UK were up 25% on the previous year, making it a record-breaking day for the long-running event. Over 300 independent record shops across the UK took part in the Saturday, 18th April event, hosting live performances, signings, DJ sets and other special activities to mark the occasion. This was the 19th annual Record Store Day event. Kim Bayley, CEO of ERA, which organises the event, said: “This year’s Record Store Day demonstrated as never before the emerging role of record shops as cultural hubs on the high street, bringing together music fans across generations and breathing new life into town centres…”

CA | Explore Ontario’s best vintage finds. From Toronto record stores to Hamilton’s Cabinet of Curiosities, here is your 2026 day-trip guide: Now that springlike weather has finally returned to Ontario, vintage markets and collectible stores are springing back into action. Weekend day-trippers can find souvenirs, antiques and unique gift items as they explore the province. Here’s a list of some of the best places to find collectibles, cool nostalgia, vinyl records and more. Sonic Boom Music: Physical music is making a major comeback, and you can shop for your favourite CDs and vinyl at Canada’s largest independent record store. Sonic Boom Music also offers turntables, speakers, movies, gifts and band T-shirts. Find new classics and hidden gems, all in one place or speak to the staff for personalized recommendations…

St. Paul, MN | One of the few Black-owned record shops in the country needs help staying open: Urban Lights Music, a Black-owned St. Paul record store, struggles to survive amid a changing era. For Tim Wilson, owner of Urban Lights Music, Record Store Day feels like Christmas morning. “It is Record Store Day. So yeah, it’s like a holiday,” Wilson said. The comparison is fitting, because for up-and-coming DJs like Jared Gillespie, known as JG, Wilson has been something like Santa Claus. “He’s been like a mentor, you know,” Gillespie said. “I came in here one Saturday and I was like, ‘Hey, do you mind if I come DJ here sometimes?’ And as soon as I stepped in here, he’s like, ‘Yeah, go up there right now.'” Wilson offers free space for people to sharpen their skills and produce music. “We teach DJing, we teach production,” Wilson said. Urban Lights Music, located at 1449 University Ave. in St. Paul, is one of the few Black-owned record shops in the country and the only one in Minnesota.

Salisbury, UK | Word Up: Vinyl revival hits the right note in Salisbury: Last Saturday, I got up early and headed into town. A sunny Salisbury spring morning is not one to be missed, and by the time we made it to the market square, the town was already buzzing with early birds. Not that birds actually buzz, British Telecom’s Buzby aside, but you get the idea. A Buzby reference might be as finger on the pulse as the phrase finger on the pulse itself, but he might have understood what I was doing up early. For Saturday was Record Store Day, the annual celebration of all things vinyl, when the nation’s independent record stores offer a tantalising range of musical rarities and one-off releases. A Buzby reference might be as finger on the pulse as the phrase finger on the pulse itself, but he might have understood what I was doing up early.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD’s The Idelic Hour with Jon Sidel

Greetings from Laurel Canyon!

Circus is coming through / And everybody knows / That when you purchase a ticket / You expect to get a show

Last week, I wrote a super-long Idelic Hour column and forgot to post it on my socials. Typical of life in 2026. To keep it short, I guess the big question today is—where am I on April 24th? IE today.

I guess I’m working away, hard as I can, listening to cool tunes and spending time in my office garage with our groovy cat Nori.

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TVD Los Angeles

TVD Live Shots: Holo Holo Music Festival at Great Park Live, 4/18

WORDS AND IMAGES: SEAN McCRACKEN | There is a specific kind of afternoon that only island reggae can build—warm sun, grass underfoot, a horn section drifting over a picnic blanket, and a whole field of people who look like they have no interest in being anywhere else. That was Great Park Live in Irvine on Saturday, April 18, where the Holo Holo Music Festival rolled through town for a lineup stacked top to bottom with heavy hitters of the genre.

Headliners The Green and SOJA brought the full weight of modern island reggae to a 10,000-capacity crowd, but the real story of the day was how much depth sat underneath them. Iam Tongi, Three Plus, Joseph Soul, and Bo Napoleon each turned in sets that could have anchored a smaller festival on their own. If you love this genre, this was the room to be in.

Great Park Live turned out to be a great place for the festival to land. Fans had the run of the field—spread out on a blanket, hold the rail for a full-stage view, or drop into one of the chairs the venue provided. The warm spring afternoon did the rest. By the time the first act took the stage, the grounds already felt like a backyard party that just happened to have a professional stage at one end of it.

Bo Napoleon opened the day and set the tone immediately, easing the crowd in with “Alcoholic” and “Nice to See You Trying.” What most of the crowd may not have realized is that when he closed his set with “Wade in Your Water”—a song widely associated with Common Kings—he was playing his own song. Napoleon wrote both “Wade in Your Water” and “Alcoholic” for Common Kings back in 2010, and those songs helped earn them a Grammy nomination. Hearing the songs delivered by the man who put them on paper, in a warm afternoon slot at an island reggae festival, was one of those low-key moments of ownership that reward the fans who know the history.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Sun Ra, Do The Impossible: Original Soundtrack purple 2LP in stores 5/22

VIA PRESS RELEASE | How do you make a documentary about a man who was also a myth? About a musician who insisted he was more than human, more than earthly—an emissary from another plane? With Sun Ra, Do The Impossible: Original Soundtrack To The Documentary, the answer arrives not only on screen, but in sound.

Out May 22 from Sundazed, and now available for pre-order, this expansive double LP and CD release presents the complete soundtrack to Sun Ra: Do The Impossible, the acclaimed documentary directed by Christine Turner and produced by Firelight. The release also includes a Blu-ray edition of the film, offering a fully immersive journey into the life, philosophy, and music of one of the most visionary artists in modern history.

Premiering at the Tribeca International Film Festival in June 2025 after six years in the making, Sun Ra: Do The Impossible went on to screen at festivals worldwide before its national broadcast debut on PBS/American Masters on February 20, 2026, where it remains available for streaming. For an artist who proudly operated in what he called the “sub-underground,” Sun Ra’s arrival into the American Masters canon represents a long-overdue recognition, what executive producer Bradford Smith describes as a kind of cosmic justice.

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Graded on a Curve: Creedence Clearwater Revival, Green River

Celebrating Doug Clifford on his 81st birthday.Ed.

1969–here in America, it was the best of years, it was the worst of years. On one hand, Woodstock marked the high-water mark of hippie utopianism. On the other hand, the Vietnam War, Altamont, and the dark specter of the Manson Family made clear that far from harkening the beginning of the Age of Aquarius, Woodstock was but an idealistic hiccup–three days of peace and music were nice, but they didn’t change the ugly and immutable basics of bestial human nature.

The soul of America was at stake in 1969, and musicians reacted to this struggle in different ways. Some sang topical protest songs. Others–Bob Dylan being the most notable example—simply exempted themselves from struggle altogether.

Two bands exemplify yet another approach. Both the Band and Creedence Clearwater Revival mythologized America, creating timeless songs filled with archetypes and imagery. The bands had much in common; they weren’t hippies, they didn’t perform free-form jams or go in for the dayglo trappings of psychedelia—for both groups, LSD, Sgt. Pepper, and the Summer of Love might as well have never happened.

But the two bands approached America in very different ways. On their eponymous 1969 release, the Band looked fondly backwards towards an idealized past–with the exception of the dire “Look Out Cleveland,” they eschewed the dark currents of 1969 altogether. As for Creedence, they occasionally addressed the issues of the day; “Fortunate Son” addressed the Vietnam war, and “Run Through the Jungle” gun proliferation in the U.S.A. But for the most part they dealt with the dark undercurrents of American history more obliquely. John Fogerty’s is an apocalyptic vision of America; if there’s one word that sums up the mood of his archetypal songs, it’s dread.

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The TVD Storefront

TVD Radar: Hadley Caliman, Iapetus first-ever vinyl reissue in stores 6/19

VIA PRESS RELEASE | Wewantsounds continues its reissue program of Bob Shad’s cult jazz label, Mainstream Records, with Hadley Caliman’s superb 1972 album, Iapetus.

Recorded in LA and featuring a heavyweight lineup of West Coast players including Todd Cochran, Woody “Sonship” Theus, Luis Gasca, and Victor Pantoja, the majority of the album was composed by Todd Cochran (aka Bayeté) soon after he had composed Bobby Hutcherson’s Blue Note classic, Head On. A true hidden treasure, it is reissued here on vinyl for the first time since 1971, featuring its original gatefold artwork with rare first-generation photos. This edition comes with newly remastered audio and a two-page insert with exclusive liner notes by Todd Cochran, reflecting on Hadley Caliman and the making of the album.

Tenor saxophonist and flutist Hadley Caliman was a key figure in the West Coast late ’60s underground scene, whose versatile style made him a first-call collaborator across genres. A fixture of the San Francisco music scene, Caliman’s rich tone and musical creativity saw him crossing over into the city’s lively jazz and psychedelic rock circles, contributing to recordings by Gerald Wilson, Mongo Santamaria, Santana, and the Grateful Dead. By 1971, he had established himself as a prominent member of this creative community, which led to his signing with Bob Shad’s Mainstream Records.

​Following his 1971 self-titled debut, Caliman returned to the studio later that year to record Iapetus. The session featured a heavyweight lineup of fellow West Coast fixtures, including trumpeter Luis Gasca, bassist James Leary, and a powerhouse percussion section of Woody “Sonship” Theus, Victor Pantoja, and Hungria Garcia. The album’s sophisticated modal structures were captured by pianist and composer Todd Cochran (aka Bayeté).

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Graded on a Curve, Flamin’ Groovies,
Live 1971 San Francisco

How do you mess up “Louie, Louie”? Butcher The Who’s “I Can’t Explain”? And why does the record sound like it was recorded by a guy in the very back of San Francisco’s Winterland with an eight-dollar tape recorder? And how is it that a band that so often sounds out of tune spends so much time tuning up?

These are just a few of the questions that passed through my mind when I heard the Flamin’ Groovies’ Live 1971, San Francisco. But here’s another question I keep asking myself—if the damn album’s so terrible, how come I keep listening to it?

Come 1971, the Flamin’ Groovies were in peak form. They released their third LP, Teenage Head, in March 1971, and it was so good that none other than Mick Jagger thought it was better than Sticky Fingers. Sticky Fingers! Mick Jagger! So how is it that come July 1971, when the Flamin’ Groovies played one of the shows leading up to the closure of Winterland, they sound (at their worst) like a no-admission-cost Bourbon Street bar band?

No wonder Winterland head honcho Bill Graham hated ‘em! Along with everybody else connected with the famed concert venue!

Well, it doesn’t always help that five of the LP’s ten tracks (or eleven if you count, and you shouldn’t, Bill Graham’s 13-second introduction), are moldy oldies and staples of no-admission-fee Bourbon Street bar bands. The Flamin’ Groovies obviously wanted to put on a “Fuck art, let’s party” old-fashioned rock and roll show, and there are times when their reaching into rock and roll’s past pays off. Why, they even include an original that sounds every bit as hoary as the Golden Oldies.

Robert Christgau once dubbed the Groovies “the thinking man’s Sha Na Na,” but since when has thinking done anyone any good? It’s the reason the FGs mess up “Louie, Louie”!

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A morning mix of news for the vinyl inclined

In rotation: 4/24/26

UK | Bringing Record Store Day To Social Care: The excitement of Record Store Day was brought directly to social care services across the nation, as our charity teamed up with The Darkness singer Justin Hawkins, rising music stars The Daydreamers, and one of the UK’s coolest record stores, Jacaranda. A video call grid showing multiple people in separate home settings. Several participants are holding up circular black signs or cards with orange arrows pointing up or down, while others hold paper cards or sit watching.The charity—its acclaimed hub offering free, accessible and inspiring live online experiences for people who draw on care and support. The powerful online experience, delivered via our acclaimed www.What-To-Do.co.uk platform, was inspired by Record Store Day—a major global celebration of the unique culture of record stores and of music.

Oxfordshire, UK | Busiest Record Store Day to date for Oxfordshire stores: Record store bosses in Oxfordshire are celebrating their busiest Record Store Day to date. Truck Store in Cowley Road, and Truck Store in Witney, formerly Rapture, were packed with customers all day on Saturday. Record Store Day is a global celebration of independent record store culture, and is dedicated to shining a spotlight on the shops that support music fans all year round. On the day itself, hundreds of highly limited releases were available exclusively from indie record stores, all on a first-come, first-served basis. Music fans bought special edition RSD releases including Taylor Swift, Charli XCX, Neil Young, Bruce Springsteen and The Colourfield.

Edinburgh, UK | Edinburgh record store owner has equipment returned following theft: An Edinburgh record store owner has had some of his equipment returned after what appeared to be a brazen theft on Saturday which was Record Store Day. Darren Yeats, the owner of VoxBox Music in Stockbridge, was preparing to make his way to St Vincent’s Chapel for a Record Store Day celebration on Saturday when some of his equipment was purloined. He left an amp and some cables on the pavement outside his building while he re-entered his flat for a couple minutes to say goodbye to his wife. A man approached unnoticed while Darren was inside and made off with his Marshall amplifier, cables and chargers, as well as a bag which was a gift from his mother. …Good news was also just round the corner for Darren, as the very man who was caught on a neighbour’s CCTV camera making off with the goods appeared at his door on Tuesday to humbly return the amp and bag.

Doylestown, PA | Record Store Day Draws Crowd At Siren Records: The Doylestown shop offered exclusive merchandise for Record Store Day on Saturday. He was the first in line, showing up with a chair and a book at 4:19 a.m. on Saturday. The man was among the vinyl fans who showed up early and often at Siren Records for Record Store Day on Saturday, considered the best of the two days devoted each year to the exclusive offerings. Among some titles that fans flocked to Siren Records for were live shows from Bruce Springsteen, Pink Floyd, Yes, the Power Station, and The Cars, among others. Other exclusive offerings were a box set or the first solo records from Crosby, Stills, and Nash, two Brian Wilson records, a Taylor Swift single, two from David Bowie, a remix of Elton John songs, and a Rolling Stones item that included six 3-inch records, a crate, and a 3-inch record player.

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  • SUPPORTING YOUR LOCAL INDIE SHOPS SINCE 2007


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