VIA PRESS RELEASE | A dazzling array of musicians, across generations and genres, have contributed to a new album that celebrates the deep influence and legacy of Doc Watson, the North Carolina guitarist, singer and songwriter who would have turned 100 on March 3 of this year.
I Am A Pilgrim: Doc Watson at 100 features new renditions of some of Watson’s most beloved recordings from his expansive catalog. It will be released April 28 on FLi Records / Budde Music and features Nora Brown, Rosanne Cash, Jerry Douglas, Chris Eldridge, Steve Earle, Bill Frisell, Corey Harris, Valerie June, Jack Lawrence, Lionel Loueke, Jeff Parker, Dolly Parton, Ariel Posen, Marc Ribot, Matthew Stevens and Yasmin Williams. It was produced by guitarist/ songwriter/ producer Matthew Stevens (known for his work producing and performing with esperanza spalding and Terri Lyne Carrington) over the past year and executive produced by Mitch Greenhill, Matthew Greenhill, and Peer Steinwald.
“The Last Thing On My Mind,” written by Tom Paxton in the early ’60s, was a staple of Watson’s catalog and recorded/ performed by Parton throughout her career. She released a recording of it in 1967 with Porter Wagoner, and Watson and Parton performed it together in 2001 at MerleFest. “Doc Watson is everyone’s hero and a great guitar player. Some say he is the absolute best, and I was honored to get to work with him a few times in my career,” says Dolly Parton.
Arthel Lane “Doc” Watson earned 7 GRAMMY Awards and 23 nominations including the Lifetime Achievement Award in 2004. He received the National Medal of Arts in 1997 from President Clinton and has been the subject of multiple books, boxed sets, and compilation albums.
PHOTO: RALF LOUIS | Sometimes, in order to go forward, you must first take a look at your past. Graham Nash has a rich and undoubtedly storied history behind him and he has recently released a live album titled, Graham Nash: Live which features him performing his first two albums—Songs for Beginners (1971) and Wild Tales (1973)—in their entirety.
Nash, however, has often focused on the future and shows no signs of slowing down. While he’s excited about this new live release, he’s also recently published A Life in Focus: The Photography of Graham Nash which showcases his longtime affair with photography. And, as we learn in this interview, he’s just completed a brand new solo album which is due to be released in early 2023. But in this chat, Graham and I talk about why he chose to revisit his first two solo albums and the experience of retracing the footsteps he made nearly a half-century ago.
Of course, we also discuss the Hollies and Crosby, Stills, Nash and Young, making long-term musical relationships work and how you can’t really envision where you’re going, unless you know where you’ve been.
Evan Toth is a songwriter, professional musician, educator, radio host, avid record collector, and hi-fi aficionado. Toth hosts and produces The Evan Toth Show and TVD Radar on WFDU, 89.1 FM. Follow him at the usual social media places and visit his website.
What were you doing at age 12? I can tell you what I was doing. Living in a one traffic light town in South Central Pennsylvania, playing backyard football with my brother, sister, and neighborhood kids, plowing through all 167 paperbacks in Ballantine Books Illustrated History of WWII, and serving as co-founder and vice president of the Anti-Orioles Association, a two-person organization (my older brother was president) dedicated to the hatred of the Baltimore Orioles.
Meanwhile, across the county in Hawthorne, California (home of the Beach Boys!) middle-schooler Steven McDonald was playing in a hard core punk band called Red Cross, whose first gig was opening for Black Flag. Steve’s band mates included older brother Jeff on vocals, Greg Hetson (who would go on to the Circle Jerks and Bad Religion) on guitar, and Ron Reyes (who would become the second of the three pre-Rollins vocalists of Black Flag) on drums.
After being threatened with a lawsuit by a certain international vampiric blood-sucking organization sharing the same name, Red Cross changed their name to Redd Kross, but not before releasing their first record, the eponymous EP “Red Cross,” in 1980. Meanwhile they were playing gigs in Orange County, whose hardcore scene was infamous for its ultraviolence. The McDonald brothers, who were friendly and smart and too busy sponging up the pop culture references that would inform their subsequent albums, thought it was all pretty stupid. Much as the Beastie Boys, who were undergoing a crash course in pop culture on the other side of the right coast, likely felt about NYC’s fist-to-the-face hardcore scene.
Anyway, “Red Cross” is a great little record, six songs with a total running time exactly one-minute and 22 seconds shy of Led Zeppelin’s “Stairway to Heaven.” But it’s far cooler than “Stairway to Heaven” because instead of bustles in hedgerows and spring cleans for the May queen, “Red Cross” includes songs about cover bands, hating high school, girls who use Clorox Bleach to lighten their hair (not a good idea!) and various and sundry other important cultural issues. The piper may indeed lead us to reason, but who needs reason when they’ve got Annette Funicello?
Record Store Day Announces 2023 List: It’s coming on Record Store Day, (Saturday, April 22, 2023) so it’s time again to roll out the incredible titles in the offing for the big, enduring holiday built in support and celebration of independent record stores the world over. This particular Record Store Day, the 16th, sets a high bar as far as the magnitude, artistry and diversity of the releases is concerned. (The UK list is here.)
New York, NY | Inside the Unlikely New York Record Store That Sells Vinyl to the Stars: The Greenwich Village record store, owned by a one-of-a-kind NYC character, stocks the shelves of Lana Del Rey, Rosalía, Bella Hadid, and more. When a 20-year-old Jamal Alnasr moved to New York City in 1990, he barely spoke English and only knew the names of 10 artists, like Madonna and Boney M, whom he’d heard on the radio. A native Palestinian, he arrived in the city after a few years spent living in Jordan as a teenager. He used music to teach himself English, then landed his first job at a record shop on Bleecker Street in Greenwich Village, where he read CD pamphlets, learned lyrics, and researched artists’ influences. After four and a half years, he opened up his own shop, Village Music, down the street, with the money he had saved from working. On opening day, Alnasr decided to put his collection of rare records up for sale, and made $5,000. “If people came in and meant to spend $20, they would spend $200,” he recalls. “I had a lot of rare stuff.” Word eventually got out that he was the man to see if you were looking for an impossible-to-find record.
San Francisco, CA | Harmonic convergence: How a stellar record fair led to a brand new record store: Globe Spinners and Offshore Sounds were sparked by two vinyl fiends who shared a love of worldly rarities and dealing discs. When one crate-digging record lover and concert promoter who was laid off during the pandemic met another record lover whose academic work specialized in media cultures of the mid-century Far Left, it was magic—or at least a boost for Japanese City Pop fandom in the Bay Area, for which both qualified. Peter Arko and Dylan Davis not only shared a love of global vinyl rarities but a yen for dealing records, mostly out of necessity in this astronomically expensive corner of the world. The two launched quarterly record fair and swap Globe Spinners together—the next one is Sun/19 at Harmonic Brewing in SF, polishing off SF Beer Week with tons of vendors and DJs, food, and, of course, drink—to focus on international genres and get together with like-minded friends. Now, they’ve opened a record store, Offshore Sounds, in new space 710 Collective. Offshore Sounds is the latest addition to a music scene that’s recovering from the past three difficult years and embracing physical media more and more. It’s certainly something to get jazzed about.
UK | Meet the people ‘Behind the Counter’ of the UK’s vinyl revival: We are pleased to announce the return of Behind the Counter for a fourth season. The 12-part video series, which had more than two million viewers across season three, celebrates the unique culture and heritage of independent record stores across the UK. A collaboration between Record Store Day, Classic Album Sundays and Bowers & Wilkins, Behind the Counter, takes you on a tour of some of the UK’s best-loved independent record shops, showcasing the passion of the owners who are “embedded in the local community” (Steve – Winyl, Manningtree) and dedicated to introducing music fans to their next favourite artists and albums. From Glasgow to Southampton, Isle of Wight to Belfast, music fans are introduced to a new record shop every week whose stories are told through individual episodes released on Tuesdays at 10am on Facebook, Instagram, YouTube, and Twitter.
In 2015 I was invited to speak at a digital marketing event during Canadian Music Week in Toronto. While in town, I mapped out the various gigs I planned to see, with the big one being Faith No More during their comeback tour. After Faith No More, I walked to the nearby Hard Rock Cafe, where there was a showcase happening for up-and-comers. One band in particular was hyped up pretty big, and they were set to hit the stage at midnight. Having my camera gear with me and always up for a shoot, I started snapping away. Little did I know that I was capturing a band that was primed and ready to reinvent a genre and ultimately create their own.
What I saw that night in Toronto was three brothers calling themselves Palaye Royale. They had made a name for themselves with their punk rock DIY attitude of doing everything themselves, building their audience, recording independently, and creating a massive buzz. This was a case where the record labels come to them instead of the other way around. Sumerian Records was that label, and as I remember at the time, it was primarily a metal label but starting to broaden its roster.
One could argue they set a precedence for others, including Earache Records with Rival Sons etc., which very likely kept these labels afloat during the dark days of illegal downloads. It’s easy to see why they would be all over a band like Palaye Royale, especially after seeing the show that night. These guys were young dudes, three brothers, who clearly had chemistry playing together, but furthermore, they were fusing two of my favorite genres; glam and early ’70s bluesy rock ‘n’ roll. Not to mention, much of the leg work was already done—they just needed help pushing them to the next level. Enter major record label.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Ben Folds will release his new album What Matters Most on June 2 via New West Records.
The 10-song set was co-produced by Folds and Joe Pisapia (K.D. Lang, Guster) in East Nashville, TN and features guest appearances by dodie, Tall Heights, and Ruby Amanfu. What Matters Most is Folds’ first studio album since his chart-topping collaboration in 2015 with the string ensemble yMusic.
Folds says, “There’s a lifetime of craft and experience all focused into this one record. Sonically, lyrically, emotionally, I don’t think it’s an album I could have made at any other point in my career.” He adds, “More than anything, I wanted to make an album that was generous, that was useful. I want you to finish this record with something you didn’t have when you started.”
Today, Folds shares the first new music from What Matters Most with the album highlight “Winslow Gardens,” an off-kilter pop song about losing track of the passing time while isolating with a loved one.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | The most comprehensive and definitive new collection of every A and B side single Dionne cut for the Scepter label featuring the legendary songwriting/production team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David.
Very, very few artists have reached the heights attained by Dionne Warwick and the songwriting/production team of Burt Bacharach and Hal David on their historic string of hit singles for the Scepter label. Over the course of a little over ten years, Dionne scored no less than 40 charting pop hits and 29 charting R&B hits for Scepter, propelling Dionne to a ranking second only to Aretha Franklin among female singers with the most chart hits in the rock era, not to mention five Grammy nods.
More importantly, Warwick, Bacharach, and David brought a new level of sophistication to popular music, and by doing so, created some of the most indelible recordings of all time. However, despite its brilliance and lasting influence, there has never been a collection at music retail that truly captured this incredible body of work until now.
The Complete Scepter Singles 1962-1973 offers the A and B-side of every single Dionne cut for the Scepter label (with the bonus inclusion of her single for Musicor featuring the hit “Only Love Can Break a Heart”), all original, (mostly) mono single versions remastered by Mike Milchner of Sonic Vision from original tape sources and annotated by veteran music journalist and Billboard contributor Paul Grein.
Oakland’s Blues Lawyer unveil All in Good Time on February 17, the band’s third full-length and first for the Dark Entries label. With vocalist-guitarist Rob I. Miller and drummer-vocalist Elyse Schrock joined by guitarist Ellen Matthews and bassist-backing vocalist Alejandra Alcala, their latest finds them moving from a sideline band to a high priority. It also captures the outfit’s embracement of a ’90s Alt rock sound, and with a heavy emphasis on melody that borders on indie pop classique.
Guess Work, Blues Lawyer’s first album, came out in April of 2018 on Emotional Response Records, with its follow-up Something Different released in November of the following year on the Mt. St. Mtn. imprint. In 2021 they issued the song “Scenic Route” on a 33⅓ rpm single-sided fully playable postcard flexi disc in a limited edition of 250 copies on Vacant Stare Records (copies are still available on Bandcamp).
For All in Good Time, the band has been described as moving on from an ’80s Flying Nun jangle approach, but to these ears, Guess Work sported a Wire-y art-punk template that fomented a suspicion the band owned at least one copy of Cali-classic Keats Rides a Harley, and with touches of Dan Treacy folded into the mix. Of its ten songs, “Real Cool Guy” is the highpoint, but the whole record’s short sharp and sweet bite is like taking a big swig of cherry cough syrup.
Some of the angles get sanded down a bit for Something Different (vinyl copies are currently available) but the ten songs still land closer to art-punk than the sounds heard on the Flying Nun Dunedin Double or Tuatara comps. “Scenic Route” falls into a decidedly indie pop neighborhood, as does its digital bonus cut “Crystal Ball.”
Biddleford, ME | Bull Moose opens Biddeford store: People were lining up to get in when Bull Moose opened it’s new location at the Biddeford Crossing Shopping Center on Saturday at its grand opening. The store, which sells vinyl records, CDs, DVDs, video games, books and more, moved from a former location in Sanford which has closed, and relocated to the Alfred Road/Route 111 shopping center, in the former Nubble bookstore location, at 403 Mariner Way, near Target, HomeGoods and other retailers. Bull Moose spokeswoman Mick Werkhoven in a telephone interview last year said the new Biddeford store, at 5,600 square feet, is nearly three times the size of the 1,800-square-foot Sanford store. “We’re adding way more vinyl, and also an entire book section — plus the Sanford team you know and love will be there with us,” Werkhoven said in a Dec. 15 social media posting. “We have really loved our time in Sanford; but this upgrade is something we really believe in. We’re wicked excited to show you what the all-new Bull Moose Biddeford will be like, and we know you’re going to love it.” The employee-owned company currently has eight Maine storefront locations and three in New Hampshire as well as an online store.
New York, NY | Inside Paradise of Replica: a downtown New York record shop-slash-living room: Run by a former Kim’s Video clerk, the cosy space in Paradise of Replica is home to one-of-a-kind vinyl from underground legends. Olivia Lindsay Aylmer speaks with the New York store owner Kyle Molzan about the store’s origins and the role of the store in its customers’ listening journeys. One summer afternoon, I glance skyward on Grand Street and notice a mysterious sign in a second-floor window: Paradise of Replica glows in cobalt. Intrigued but subway-bound, I make a mental note to investigate. Little do I know the treasure trove that awaits me once I finally ascend the staircase months later. I have grown all too accustomed to the heartbreaking news of my favourite local record shops closing forever (Rebel Rebel, Other Music, the list goes on) that I almost can’t believe what I find upon seeking out the story behind the sign: to my pleasant surprise, here’s a relatively new record shop, filled with mostly used vinyl and if-you-know-you-know ephemera previously owned by a cast of New York characters, that first opened its doors in November 2021.
Aberdeen, UK | Aberdeen music lovers flock to new city record shop after grand opening: Goldstar Records opened up on the city’s Fonthill Road earlier this month after plans for a new Aberdeen shop were first unveiled by the outlet last October. The store mainly sells vintage vinyl records. Aberdeen music lovers flocked to buy some bargain records after a new shop opened in the Granite City. Goldstar Records opened up on the city’s Fonthill Road earlier this month with the new music shop focusing on selling vintage vinyl records. Plans for a new Aberdeen shop were first unveiled by Goldstar Records last October, with regular updates on the store’s progress being provided since then. Following their official opening on February 2 the store’s owners said: “Thanks so much to everyone who managed to pop in today; I really appreciate it. It really was a great first opening day! The shelves are stacked and really for digging. Looking forward to more vinyl spinning tomorrow.”
Washington, DC | DC’s Most Adventurous Record Store Just Opened in Chevy Chase: Did you love Other Music in NYC? This is the place for you. The Chevy Chase Arcade is a pretty space with a long history, but it’s not exactly known as a hub of hip shopping. Back in the 1930s, you could patronize a plumber, a barber shop, and a pharmacy, and that’s been the general small-town vibe ever since. It is not, to say the least, a place you would think to stop by to peruse the latest trove of avant-garde jazz or German minimal-techno records. But starting today, that sleepy indoor corridor on Connecticut Avenue in Chevy Chase DC is home to one of the city’s most exciting new stores: art sound language. As the name implies, the small shop offers both records and books (including fiction and visual-art offerings). It’s a highly curated selection that focuses on the more-adventurous end of the spectrum. If record labels like Kompakt, Numero Group, and Awesome Tapes From Africa get your ears tingling, this is the place for you.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | The Kinks, one of the greatest ever British rock groups, celebrate their 60th Anniversary in 2023. Formed in 1963 in Muswell Hill, North London, by brothers Ray and Dave Davies with their friend Pete Quaife, and joined by Mick Avory in early 1964, the band quickly established themselves as one of the epoch-defining groups of the ’60s, with their impact still being felt around the world today.
The stats speak for themselves: The Kinks have sold over 50 million records worldwide and have been streamed over a billion times; they have achieved five US Top 10 singles, nine US Top 40 albums, seventeen UK Top 20 singles and five UK Top 10 albums, with four albums certified Gold. Among numerous honors, they have received the Ivor Novello Award for Outstanding Service To British Music and have been inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall Of Fame and the UK Music Hall of Fame. Multi-award winning, legendary frontman Sir Ray Davies is widely recognized as one of the greatest British songwriters of all time.
The Kinks 60 campaign will be a two-year-long celebration of their illustrious musical journey career, confirming their place as one of the greatest and most influential rock groups of all time. As a key part of the campaign, and to mark this milestone, a career-defining anthology, The Journey, will be released on BMG in two parts, with The Journey – Part 1 released on 24 March 2023.
The songs on The Journey – Part 1 (1964-1975) have been handpicked for the first time by Ray, Dave and Mick, curated according to themes inspired by the trials and tribulations of their journey through life together as a band since 1963.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | This past fall Tame Impala’s landmark album Lonerism turned 10. To mark the occasion the band performed the album in full at the California festival, Desert Daze. Today, the Lonerism 10 Year Anniversary Box Set has been announced for release on May 26 with pre-orders available beginning today here. The 3 LP box set features a 24 page booklet, unreleased Lonerism demos and never before heard demo sessions. Anniversary edition artwork was designed by Erin Knutson and Immanuel Yang, with additional photography by Matt Sav and Kevin Parker.
In a recent Instagram post, Parker said it’s “difficult to sum up what the album means to me at this point. It was a pretty special time making the music for me. In a way, it’s when I truly discovered myself as an artist. Coming off the back of Innerspeaker I had this new sense of purpose…calling…whatever you want to call it. I had finally given myself permission to let music take over my being completely…to become totally immersed in my own world of recording music. So I had this new sense of creative freedom. I felt free to be ambitious, weird, pop, experimental, whatever, and didn’t feel judged because I was finally just doing it for myself and believed in myself. For the most part anyway…”
Lonerism, Tame Impala’s second studio full length was recorded both at Kevin Parker’s home studio in Perth and in Paris. The album received a 9.0 ‘Best New Music’ on Pitchfork saying “Lonerism is portable and joyous, a soundtrack for the times when you’re walking downtown and look up at a collection of skyscrapers, or driving through a mountain pass on an interstate…embodying and advocating a wakeful and passive state of psychedelia.”
The album birthed the singles “Elephant” and “Feels Like We Only Go Backwards,” which received worldwide commercial radio play and endless film and TV sync licensing respectively, catapulting Tame Impala into the mainstream. The album topped 2012 year-end lists and was nominated for Best Alternative Album at the 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards and won multiple ARIA Awards in Parker’s home country of Australia. Since its release Lonerism has gone on to be RIAA certified gold and platinum in multiple territories and has reached nearly 2 Billion lifetime streams.
Experience Hendrix, the estate of Jimi Hendrix, continues to reissue music from the late guitarist and new, previously unreleased projects. There have not been many musical artists from the past with more posthumous releases than Hendrix. Fortunately, the quality of these releases has mostly been quite good.
The reissues have also been reflective of the many format changes of music since his death in 1970. While very soon after his death, many Hendrix reissues came out, the CD age, beginning in the early ’80s, offered an opportunity to put out previously released recordings, but also a plethora of unreleased live and studio works. With the advent of the more recent vinyl revival, releases of music from Hendrix have brought about reissues and new releases that reflect the way his music was meant to be experienced, on vinyl.
This latest, new release is yet another previously unreleased live concert recording, this one from The Jimi Hendrix Experience (Hendrix, Noel Redding, Mitch Mitchell). The vinyl set is a two-LP, gatefold package with archival inner sleeves and a 12-page color booklet, and it includes essays by Billy Gibbons of ZZ Top and former Los Angeles Times pop music writer Randy Lewis. It is also available on CD.
It is from a key year in Hendrix history: 1969. The show is from April 26th and it was recorded at the Los Angeles Forum, a still relatively new venue and one that had only been presenting concerts for a short time. This was in an era when arena concerts were becoming more common and the Experience was peaking in terms of its fame. It was also during a period though, when the group was beginning to slowly drift apart.
Dividing his time between Los Angeles, Mexico City, and land that he recently bought in the high Mojave Desert, Cesar Saez is a true Bohemian spirit with a predilection for the black and white films of The Golden Age of Mexican cinema, vintage clothing, and vinyl. Regarding his vinyl rituals, Saez explains “Once the needle drops, you’re in for the journey and not just one song; and that’s how I like to do it.” It’s that level of regard for the journey and not just the destination that drives the narrative of his latest release, El Esplendor de la Tristeza aka The Splendor of Sadness in English.
Ebbing with the highs and lows of love and heartbreak, The Splendor of Sadness is a dramatic continuum influenced by ’70s Mexican pop legends such as Juan Gabriel and José José and other international artists of high drama like Serge Gainsbourg and Scott Walker. Modern boleros are interwoven with rock ‘n’ roll and traces of Britpop on this 11-song pilgrimage in English/Spanish, casting light on all of Saez’s influences. With the languid conversational stage presence of Primal Scream’s Bobby Gillespie, his album and persona are a new musical framework.
After the breakup of his last band The Wallburds, the former Bixby Knolls member found himself writing songs in Spanish for the first time despite English being his first language. A latent direction with roots in his childhood in Mexico City, Saez was introduced to The Rolling Stones and The Beatles by his father who listened to the CDMX radio station that steadily played classic rock hits. But it was his mother’s boyfriend who taught him his first chords on the guitar. He would show up every week on his mother’s doorstep with flowers and a mariachi band to serenade her, and then take the whole family out to dinner. It’s the duality of these experiences that have led Saez to the multi-lingual approach he’s taking as a solo artist now.
Texas-born singer-songwriter Laurie Styvers cut a pair of records in the early 1970s, major-label efforts that failed to catch fire and in turn effectively encapsulate her recording career. Gemini Girl: The Complete Hush Recordings, a 2CD and digital set that releases on February 17 through High Moon Records, gathers both albums and adds unreleased material, in the process revealing that had the chips fallen a little differently, Styvers could’ve persevered and ended up a far more well-known figure.
Laurie Styvers could really sing, her voice pretty but substantial. She fit the early ’70s singer-songwriter mold well, perhaps a little too well. Although in Alec Palao’s extensive notes for this collection, it’s Joni Mitchell that’s described as one of Styvers’ prime influences, the songs on both of her LPs are most reminiscent of Carole King, in large part due to the piano foundation.
Both Spilt Milk (Warner Brothers/Chrysalis ’71) and The Colorado Kid (Chrysalis ’73) were cut in the UK, where Styvers had traveled with family as a teen. Prior to her solo work she was part of the psych-folk group Justine, who cut a single on the Dot label in ’69 and a pretty likeable self-titled album for Uni the following year. During this period, she returned to the US to attend college in Colorado and then moved back to the UK, reuniting with Justine.
Upon Justine’s breakup (related to a drug bust), producers Hugh Murphy and Shel Talmy focused on Styvers as a solo artist for their fledgling Hush Productions (a “joint production, publishing and management venture”), to which Justine had briefly been signed. Spilt Milk came out when Styvers was just 20 years old, and to promote its release she was booked to play the Troubadour in Los Angeles opening for Emitt Rhodes.
Cromer, UK | Cromer: Another Planet record store opens in West Street: Two vinyl lovers are looking to put a Norfolk town on the map among music fans after launching a new record store. Another Planet has opened in West Street in Cromer, becoming the only high street shop of its kind currently in the coastal resort. The store is run by Racheal Battley and business partner Marc Wilson, who together have spent more than 40 years rifling through crates digging for the finest releases. Ms Battley said: “We have had such fantastic support already and we really hope to be at the heart of the community here. “Our customers have been so supportive already and we have had great feedback. The support has been overwhelming so far. “We really hope Cromer can become a destination for record lovers, with people thinking about travelling here to hunt for vinyl.” Another Planet becomes Cromer’s only physical record store, which is open six days a week Tuesday to Sunday, joining the popular Cromer Record Fair, which pops up weekly at various venues.
Reno, NV | Recycled Records is moving to a new location in a few months. Here’s what we know. A recent Facebook post ignited rumors that Recycled Records, an iconic Reno music shop that’s been in business for decades, would be closing. That isn’t happening, but the longtime record shop will be moving to a new location in the coming months. We visited the shop at 822 S. Virginia St. to talk with co-owners Eric Jacobson and Kyle Howell to learn more. What’s actually happening? Jacobson confirmed to the RGJ that Recycled Records is moving southward but declined to give details on the new location until the lease is signed. Recycled Records needs to be out of the Midtown location by June 1 when the lease ends. They said they were within days of closing on the deal.
Charleston, SC | Charleston vinyl shop teams up with Philadelphia Eagles for charity: When the Philadelphia Eagles management team contacted Record Stop, a downtown Charleston business, to create a limited-edition vinyl of holiday music, it was an opportunity the business could simply not resist. In late October, the concept of “A Philly Special Christmas,” a vinyl starring Jason Kelce, Jordan Mailata and Lane Johnson of the Eagles, was brought to Record Stop after the group was turned down from other vinyl manufacturers. Starting as a family business, Record Stop also owns Monostereo Vinyl, which is a record label and vinyl manufacturing division. Record Stop Owner Mike Gomez and Marketing Director Eric Nail say it typically takes from six months to a year to produce a project of this size, but the duo was determined to drop the first release before the holidays. “…We were able to utilize our internal team to get it to all the fans, which is close to 30,000 records.”
Taylor Swift sells out heart-shaped vinyl for Valentine’s day in minutes: Limited Edition Taylor Swift ‘Lover’ vinyl sells out almost immediately. The ‘Lavender Haze’ singer is back in the news this week with a limited edition release vinyl of her “Lovers: live from Paris” singles collection. The two heart-shaped vinyls, released just in time for valentine’s day sold out in under 30 minutes. Only available on the singer’s official website, the set of two vinyls are made from a marbled pink and blue PVC material. The dual-sided records include various singles from the artist’s 2019 ‘Lovers’ album, performed and recorded live in Paris. Although the website set a strict limit of one per customer policy, the Valentine’s day vinyl managed to sell out in under 30 minutes. …The high demand for Taylor Swift records and other merchandise has also created a high resale value for the products. Almost as fast as the Lover’s heart-shaped vinyl records sold out, eBay listings of the item started popping up.