VIA PRESS RELEASE | Mike Oldfield’s Tubular Bells is one of the most iconic pieces of music ever created. Recorded when Oldfield was just 19 years old, the album was released on May 25, 1973, as the debut album from Virgin Records.
While initial sales were positive, the album became a worldwide phenomenon when the first track was used as part of the soundtrack for The Exorcist. Despite only being featured in a couple of scenes, Tubular Bells has become closely associated with the film, with many referring to it as “the theme of The Exorcist,” and the haunting sounds regularly earning a spot on horror playlists. In the fifty years since its release, the album’s popularity has not waned, racking up more than 17.5 million copies sold and 18 million streams.
Tubular Bells was also a staple of the 2012 Summer Olympics Opening Ceremony. Academy Award-winner Danny Boyle, director of the opening, stated that he wanted to make the music the “cornerstone” of a 20-minute sequence of the ceremony. Tubular Bells has regularly appeared in advertisements, television shows, movies, and has been incorporated into live performance by Tori Amos.
In celebration of the album’s 50th anniversary, a live concert performance was held over three days at London’s Royal Festival Hall. The music was accompanied by dance and acrobatic feats by the Circa Contemporary Circus to create a beautiful and memorable experience that truly brings this masterpiece to life. This once-in-a-lifetime performance was captured in 4K and will be coming to home video in both a 2-disc Blu-ray and 2-disc DVD set. Home audiences will be able to experience the unique performance while being treated to a feature-length documentary on the history of the Tubular Bells.
There was a moment during the Woodstock Music Festival of ’69, when its founder, the 24-year-old Michael Lang, was confronted with a generation-defining decision. People had started to climb the fences surrounding the stage and audience parameters in an attempt to gain entry. Lang had to make a call. Rather than tightening a hold on admittance, he decided in the moment to make Woodstock the free festival it was ultimately meant to be. Nearly half a million people was the ultimate headcount. Lang’s decision was an example of the greater good of enlightened ideas surpassing monetary interest and potential gain, something the hippie counterculture of the 1960s was all about. It is a spiritual-success story in an instance.
Then there is Jann Wenner, founder of Rolling Stone, the publication created in 1967 that gave voice to the youth culture, the hippies, and leant them a stake in the Real World. The magazine invented a pre-internet meeting place where rock ‘n’ roll was given the reverence that it deserved, in which once could connect with likeminded music-mad people. Last month Jann published his memoir Like a Rolling Stone, a weighty tome surpassing five hundred pages. It came somewhat on the heels of the well-received and somewhat character-damning Sticky Fingers by Joe Hagan, Wenner’s biographer who he eventually parted ways with mid-project. Like a Rolling Stone is Wenner by Wenner, period.
One of the most immediately identifiable characteristics in his book is his huge ego. In many ways it’s deserved. He was present through the second half of the twentieth century, lived with eyes wide open through the 1960s, ’70s, ’80s, ’90s, and from a privileged seat and ideal point-of-view. But solely and uniquely, he saw the need to give voice to this collective perspective, that it was worth a try to build a seat of power, and to garner recognition for it from the straight world at large. Rebellion against The Establishment is fantastic, and valid, and provides ample opportunity for creating a new world order—but what better way to rebel than by meeting the enemy on his own ground and forcing him to recognize a worthy adversary.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | The story behind this album, which marked Jack Kerouac’s debut as a recording artist, is almost as fascinating (but not quite) as the performances it contains. Kerouac had completely bombed in his first set during a 1957 engagement at the Village Vanguard when TV personality, comedian, and musician Steve Allen volunteered to accompany him on piano during the second.
The results were so impressive that legendary engineer Bob Thiele then brought the duo into the studio to record an album for Dot Records. In true, stream-of consciousness, Beat fashion, the entire album was cut in one session with one take for each track, Allen’s piano weaving in and out and occasionally commenting on Kerouac’s verbal riffs to great effect.
However, when Poetry for the Beat Generation was ready for release in March 1958, Randy Wood, the president of Dot Records, was appalled by the then-daring language and subject matter and canceled the release—but not before 100 promo copies got out. (And if you have one you’re set for life!)
Thiele then left the company over the dispute and got the master tape in the bargain, which he finally released on the Hanover label which he founded with Allen in June 1959. That release still stands as one of the most momentous spoken word albums not just of the ‘50s but of all time—and we at Real Gone Music are proud to bring it to you in a milky clear vinyl version in Jack Kerouac’s 100th birthday year!
A beautiful eccentric residing in mid-20th century NYC, Louis Thomas Hardin aka Moondog also possessed extraordinary musical vision. An associate of Leonard Bernstein, Arturo Toscanini, and Charlie Parker, a collaborator with Julie Andrews and the Brooklyn Philharmonic Symphony Orchestra, a key influence on the minimalism of Philip Glass and Steve Reich, covered by Janis Joplin, Kronos Quartet, and Antony and the Johnsons; there was truly nobody else like him. After a handful of singles and EPs his long-playing debut arrived with 1956’s Moondog.
A simply fantastic photograph of Moondog is used for the jacket of the 2LP compilation The Viking of Sixth Avenue; it finds him on a ‘50s Gotham street corner standing in front of a lamppost and decked out in full regalia. He cuts quite an appealing figure, but what makes the snap such a kick is the older couple passing by on his left side.
For other than Dwight and Mamie, one would be hard-pressed to find a better, or perhaps I should say more stereotypical, representation of Eisenhower-era America. The contrast between Moondog and this strolling pair is so sharp that the cynic in me has occasionally suspected the pic was staged in an attempt to play-up the legendary composer’s unconventionality.
This is not to insinuate that Moondog’s image was some sort of con. To the contrary, the legit uniqueness of the man’s background rivals that of sui generis American boho-hobo Harry Partch. Born in 1916, Hardin lived in Kansas, Wyoming, Missouri, Iowa, Arkansas, and Tennessee, with exposure to Native American tribal ceremonies having a profound effect on his art. After moving to NYC in 1943 he lived as a street musician and sporadic recording artist until the early ‘70s.
Vinyl now matters even more to the music industry: It is the final quarter of 2022 and almost time for Spotify Wrapped – that thrilling rush of data that knows more about your music listening habits than you do yourself. However, my Wrapped will be redundant this year, since at least half of my listening time has migrated to playing vinyl records on the turntable. Statistically, this is impossible to quantify, unless I am to keep a record by hand. Like many other music fans of all ages, vinyl has gripped me. The whole experience of dropping into my local record shops, chatting with the folks at the counter and on the shop floor, browsing the aisles, having a latte, and all the rest of it. Walking out of there on a Friday or Saturday with a couple of new albums tucked under my arm has become a highlight of this post-pandemic lifestyle.
Tucson, AZ | This Tucson record show will have thousands of albums for sale: Need proof that vinyl records are still red hot as collectibles? Talk to Bruce Smith, whose Tucson Record Show returns for its 17th year this Saturday, Oct. 29. Smith, owner of the online record business Cassidy Collectibles, said last year’s show was easily one of the best he’s ever had. Not only were the attendance numbers high, but “nearly all of the sellers I talked to were very pleased and anxious to come back,” he said. Smith is cautiously optimistic that this show will do just as well, with about 20 dealers from across Arizona set to offer tens of thousands of titles from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Fraternal Order of Police Hall, 3445 N. Dodge Blvd. Smith said a little bit of everything will be available: jazz, soul, hip-hop, country. But the most popular titles by far, year after year, are the classic rock albums.
Maplewood, NJ | Elusive Sounds Maplewood to Hold 5th Record Fair + Music Extravaganza Sunday, Nov. 13: Maplewood residents Charles Maggio and Jennifer Klein are hosting the 5th Maplewood Record Fair on Sunday, November 13 from 10AM-4PM at The Woodland. Around 40 vendors will sell items that are music, art, movie, and collectibles related. Patrons will find an eclectic assortment of vinyl records, music paraphernalia, collectibles, vintage clothing, comics, books, and more! Vegan and vegetarian treats available.
Fresno, CA | Fresno Record Show invites all to buy or sell records: The Fresno Record show held its event on Sunday, October 23rd. The event not only invites community members to buy records but also allows them to sell their own collection at the show. The record show is usually held 3-4 times a year but has been on pause for the past couple of years due to the pandemic. The event was held this year at Bentley’s Drum Shop in Fresno, which has been in business for 30 years. The owner, Dana Bentley, says the turnout keeps growing and that this year was the biggest yet now that records are making a big comeback. This is the 8th time the show has been held, and people of all ages were there to find some of their favorite records.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Type O Negative The Origin Of The Feces (Not Live At Brighton Beach) 30th Anniversary 2LP is Run Out Groove’s new pre-order title.
Type O’s second studio album was recorded in a studio but recorded to sound “live” by adding crowd noises, banter with a fake audience, and even an abrupt song stop because the venue supposedly had received a bomb threat. This was done to mimic the controversy the band faced during the European portion of their Slow, Deep and Hard tour.
This album was also the first time Type O Negative started to include cover songs performed in their distinct sound. The album includes covers of Black Sabbath’s “Paranoid” and Billy Roberts’ “Hey Joe,” which has been re-titled “Hey Pete” in homage to singer, Peter Steele. The reprise of “Kill You Tonight” has a sample of the closing piano strike from The Beatles’ “A Day in the Life.”
For the first stand-alone vinyl release in North America, ROG is reissuing the band’s sophomore effort for its 30h Anniversary. The 140g deluxe 2LP set is pressed on color vinyl, features the original “censored” sphincter cover art with a scratch n’ sniff surprise, deluxe packaging, and an exclusive poster of the famous 1498 woodcut by Albrecht Dürer, The Four Horsemen of the Apocalypse. An extremely limited quantity of a dark green color variant will be available exclusively Run Out Groove and Type O’s webstore while supplies last. We expect to start shipping this title by November 25, 2022.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Pharoah Sanders’ classic 1969 album Karma will be pressed on 180-gram black vinyl as part of Verve/UMe’s acclaimed audiophile vinyl reissue series, Acoustic Sounds.
Due for release December 16th, the album is being mastered by Ryan K. Smith at Sterling Sound from the analog tapes and will come housed in a high-quality tip-on deluxe gatefold jacket. Like all Acoustic Sounds releases, production is being supervised by Chad Kassem, CEO of Acoustic Sounds, the world’s largest source for audiophile recordings, and will utilize the unsurpassed production craft of Quality Record Pressings. This reissue honors the late jazz legend who passed away in September at the age of 81 and concludes the series for 2022.
Released in May of 1969, Karma was the tenor saxophonist’s third Impulse! Records album and is now seen as a milestone of the Spiritual Jazz movement. A natural progression in the sonic exploration that Sanders, along with John Coltrane and Alice Coltrane, had spearheaded over the previous five years, the album features two tracks “The Creator Has A Master Plan,” and “Colors.” Filling the entire A-Side of the LP, “Creator” is as close as Spiritual Jazz comes to having its own anthem. Meanwhile, the lone B-side track, “Colors,” is no less transfixing.
Remembering Helen Reddy, born on this day in 1941. —Ed.
Friends, Romans, Vinyl District readers; I come to praise Helen Reddy, not to bury her in the insulting verbiage many use to unfairly deride her formidable talents. Many have nothing but snide things to say about her, but I do not count myself amongst them; her multitude of AM radio hits—they didn’t call Reddy the “Queen of ‘70s Pop” for nothing—brought me too much happiness in my youth, from the altogether uncanny “Angie Baby” to her landmark feminist anthem “I Am Woman.”
Australia’s Helen Maxine Lamond Reddy has been unfairly consigned to the easy-listening dustbin of history. There’s no denying Reddy generally stuck to the middle of the road. But to steal a phrase from Dylan Thomas, she sang in her chains like the sea. And a careful look at her discography reveals she brought a host of weirdly subversive bunch of songs to the party while she was at it. Lucky for us, they’re all to be found on 1990’s Helen Reddy’s Greatest Hits (And More).
Why buy this comp and not another? I’m glad you asked. First, it includes the funky electric piano-dominated version of “Angie Baby” I grew up listening to on the radio, and not the alternative version to be found on her other best of packages. Second, it includes the dance-floor friendly “I Can’t Hear You No More,” which you won’t find on most of her greatest hits albums. And the same goes for “Happy Girls,” her moving lament to “the lonely girls of the world.”
“Happy Girls” joins a triumvirate of empathetic portraits of woman who are, depending on your point of view, either mad or society’s outcasts. The countrified and gospel-inflected “Delta Dawn” tells the story of a Brownsville woman who wanders the streets wearing “a faded rose from days gone by” looking for a “mysterious brown-haired man” who is going to take her to his “mansion in the sky.” The touched protagonist of the funky and horn-fueled “Leave Me Alone (Ruby Red Dress)” also wanders the town, talking to herself and telling everybody who approaches her to, well, leave her alone.
This week’s Artist of the Week is London-based artist Ch’Lu—aka Camilla Mathias. Her latest single “I’m Not The Type To Sit & Swipe” is a highly relatable song about the trials and tribulations of online dating.
Ch’Lu has previously been praised by none other than Kate Bush herself, someone whose sound you can clearly hear in Camilla’s work. “I’m Not The Type To Sit & Swipe” combines art-pop and folktronic elements creating a sound that is undeniably enchanting.
Ch’lu is is a classical guitarist, singer, and actress. Her self-produced upcoming album is due for release in 2023 and is funded by Arts Council of England.
It’s swell when a new jazz reissue label’s choices are inspired rather than predictable. Such is the case with New Land of the UK, which has an expanded 2LP edition of A Modern Jazz Symposium of Music and Poetry with Charlie Mingus coming out October 28. It follows three albums released back in August: Howard McGhee’s Dusty Blue, Gerry Mulligan’s Night Lights, and a self-titled effort by Blue Mitchell. All four are reviewed below, with extra emphasis on the upcoming Mingus set.
It’s just an assumption, and quite possibly wrong, that the New Land label takes its name from Lee Morgan’s masterwork of 1964, Search for the New Land. The reasoning is that Morgan’s album, which sat on the shelf for two years as Blue Note tried to squeeze out a follow-up to Morgan’s 1964 instrumental hit “The Sidewinder.”
Featuring a unimpeachable sextet (trumpeter-composer Morgan, tenor saxophonist Wayne Shorter, pianist Herbie Hancock, guitarist Grant Green, bassist Reggie Workman, and drummer Billy Higgins, Search for the New Land is a highwater mark in modern jazz, but more to the point, it was a record that came into existence without the expectations of a masterpiece attached, as its reputation has grown over the years.
It’s easy to speculate that the four records reissued by New Land benefitted from a similar lack of pressure in their making, even as Dusty Blue, originally issued by Bethlehem in 1961, was something of a comeback for the crucial Bop-era trumpeter Howard McGhee, whose return to the recording studio after a decade struggling with drug addiction found him in top-notch company: Tommy Flanagan on piano, Roland Alexander on tenor sax and flute, Pepper Adams on baritone sax, Bennie Green on trombone, Ron Carter on bass, and Walter Bolden on drums.
Medicine Hat, AB | Sound Lovers holding grand opening at new location: Sound Lovers Audio Video has a new location with a grand opening coming up next week on Oct. 28 and 29. Manufacturer representatives will be at the store to answer questions and talk to people, and refreshments from King Bagel will be available. For owner, John Foubert, the grand opening is more about where the store is currently at. “I started out at home and then moved to the lower level of the Arcade Plaza,” he said. One record store left and the other, along with Foubert, left a short time later. His new location used to be Adam’s Jewellers, and Audio Excellence was two doors down. “It’s a good location, people remember it.” Foubert says he bought some comfortable chairs for customers to sit in and the walls have absorbent panels and wooden diffusers on them. About 30 per cent of the wall should be covered and it’s trial and error to find a happy balance.
Belmar, NJ | Lofidelic Records hosts groovy shows and offers lo-fi, vintage vinyl: “We love having this shop because we’ve got to meet a whole bunch of people who are into the same hobby that we are,” David Hernandez owner. Whether it’s a vinyl record spinning or an up-and-coming band jamming, when you walk by Lofidelic Records on Main Street you’ll be sure to hear some groovy music coming from the shop. Lofidelic Records, named after lo-fi music quality and ‘delic,’ referring to psychedelic and funkadelic, is a vinyl shop located at 904 Main Street that offers thousands of both new and vintage vinyl records. …David Hernandez, the shop’s owner, said he’d decided to start selling vinyl records after he was fired from his corporate job in 2017. “To be honest I never liked selling records, I had a huge collection in my basement… I only liked buying records,” Hernandez said. “Once I was fired from my job, I was looking around my basement and I started to get the idea of ‘What if I started selling these records?’ And that idea kind of planted the seed and I researched it and researched it, and it took off from there.”
Detroit, MI | Go retro at this record store: Shop in Royal Oak sells vinyl, cassette tapes and more. Albums, 45s, CDs, cassettes, DVDs, VHS tapes and more… If it’s old school, retro media, you are going to find it at Solo Records, a gem of a shop on Woodward Ave. in Royal Oak. Solo Records has been in business for 41 years, according to the shop’s owner Lorna Kuschel. When you walk into the store, you’ll find vintage t-shirts and notice art and posters on the wall, but it’s the music that will catch your eyes and ears. You can rummage through rows of albums and look for vintage finds. Solo Records manager Heath Craig described the shop as having a little bit of everything. The music ranges from The Beatles to Archie Bell & The Drells, Alice Cooper, George Benson, Dave Brubeck, Ella Fitzgerald, and many others. While appearing on “Live In The D”, Solo Records also showcased an original copy of “Steamin’ with the Miles Davis Quintet.” One customer, Eric, calls Solo Records a “unique place” and always finds something different when he visits.
New York, NY | Razor-n-Tape’s flagship shop opens in Greenpoint: Greenpoint’s music scene is growing yet again — this weekend, Razor-N-Tape is opening at 110 Meserole Ave. This opening marks the first brick-and-mortar space for Razor-N-Tape, a prolific and Brooklyn-rooted dance music label that was founded in 2012 by Jason Kriv and Aaron Dae and features a worldwide roster of artists. The space will be open Fridays through Sundays for buying vinyl, merch, DJ accessories, and more, and will serve as a home base for Razor-N-Tape operations throughout the rest of the week. Starting today, October 21, the shop will feature a weekend of opening events and live music at their boutique DJ booth in-store from 12 to 8 p.m. daily. Jason Kriv, co-owner of Razor-N-Tape and co-founder of Hot Honey Sundays, describes the birth of the new flagship location as something akin to the kind of fate that only seems to happen in Brooklyn.
PHOTOS: RACHEL LANGE | The DC Record Fair returned to Eaton DC on October 16th, 2022. The usual attractions—drinks, DJs, and the best of the waxmongers from all around the DMV—took over the second-floor exhibition space, with a special preview of what’s to come at next month’s Capital Audiofest, which runs from November 11–13th at the Twinbrook Hilton in Rockville.
The District always brings out a strong showing of hip-hop, blues, soul, funk, and punk, and a few hours’ crate-digging doubles as a crash course in the sonic history of the city. However, the 2022 turnout skewed younger and more diverse than ever before, and sellers came prepared with a healthy inventory of alternative, indie, pop, and new releases.
It’s a snapshot of the vinyl resurgence in action, veteran collectors bumping elbows—literally—with teens and twentysomething neophytes on the hunt for the freshest pressing of their favorite artist. But classic acts and albums are finding a new audience, too. A young couple on my left is delighted to find one of the two dozen copies of Bridge Over Troubled Water floating around, while a redhead with a nose ring on my right wants the Replacements and only the Replacements.
VIA PRESS RELEASE | Originally released on the Concord label, this masterful 1978 meeting of jazz guitar giants has quietly become one of the most collectible albums of its era. Herb Ellis and Remo Palmier (a.k.a Palmieri) were contemporaries in the red-hot NYC jazz scene of the ‘40s, but they arrived at this recording through very different routes.
Ellis’ reputation steadily grew as he went from being a sideman in the Glen Gray and Jimmy Dorsey orchestras to being a mainstay in the Oscar Peterson Trio in the ‘50s, and later playing in a guitar trio with Barney Kessel and Charlie Byrd. Palmier, on the other hand, got his career off to a blazing start, playing with Coleman Hawkins before appearing on seminal bebop sides (e.g. “Groovin’ High”) with Charlie Parker and Dizzy Gillespie.
But then, health issues intervened, and Palmier spent the next three decades or so working a staff job at CBS for The Arthur Godfrey Show. Finally, after the show was canceled, Palmier re-entered jazz circles but never really recorded much, which only makes Windflower that much more of a treasure.
“Sublime” is the word that springs to our mind, but you can substitute your own superlative; backed by George Duvivier on bass and Ron Traxler on drums, Ellis and Palmier bring an organic sense of swing, beautifully-voiced chords, and lyrical lead lines to such fare as “The Night Has a Thousand Eyes,” “Groove Merchant,” and even “Danny Boy.” Produced by Concord label founder Carl Jefferson. First-ever reissue, emerald green vinyl!
The title of this 1973 release is certainly appropriate seeing as how many of its songs move in the direction of outer space where oxygen tends to be in short supply, and the band’s name seems borrowed from some B-flick about an intrepid spaceship commander doing battle with evil Gerkazoids somewhere in the environs of planet Krasznahorki, and what’s more the LP’s song titles continue the theme, and it would all be swell and futuristic if it weren’t for the fact that Sufficiently Breathless is, when all is said and orbiting Uranus, a second-rate NASA reject made up of scraps of musical styles salvaged from other, more aerodynamically sound bands.
Los Angeles’ Captain Beyond were one of those bands that got labeled a supergroup, and I suppose you can call them that if you squint long enough. Me, I wouldn’t call a band composed of former Deep Purple vocalist Rod Evans, a guitarist and bassist from Iron Butterfly, and a guy who used to pound the skins for Johnny Winter a supergroup. But hey, if the label helped them move so much as a single unit, god bless them.
If Sufficiently Breathless doesn’t leave you breathless period it’s because while the band plays an eclectic mix of acoustic and space rock, progressive rock and jazz fusion, originality, for the most part, isn’t their forte. They’re like that alien shape-shifter in a horror movie–you know, the one that’s Bob Dylan one moment then Bobby Flay the next, then Bob Hope the minute after that, then Bobby the Spazz down the street with the three left feet some thirty seconds later, but doesn’t have its own body it can call home. Except in Captain Beyond’s case they go from Santana to Yes to Pink Floyd. And they’re not very adept at getting away with their thievery—they’re always getting caught in a trap and can’t even chew off their left paw to escape because it’s the property of Carlos Santana.
UK | National Album Day boosts vinyl sales by 30%: Vinyl LP sales in the UK soared by nearly one-third during this year’s National Album Day. A series of classic albums specially released for the event lifted the overall vinyl market. Jointly organised by the BPI and the Entertainment Retailers Association, this fifth edition of National Album Day took place on Saturday, October 15 with a theme of debut albums. It was presented in association with audio partner Bowers & Wilkins and broadcast partner BBC Sounds. Marking this year’s theme, some 30 classic debut albums were exclusively released or reissued on vinyl and CD, including titles by Black Sabbath, The Clash, Jake Bugg, Jamiroquai, Jennifer Lopez, Mariah Carey, Nas, The Police, Supergrass, The The and Wu-Tang Clan. These were available in participating UK indie stores, HMV and Fopp, Amazon and other outlets. Based on Official Charts Company data, vinyl LP sales last Saturday (October 15) increased by 30% compared to the previous Saturday, while CD sales rose by 20%.
Saratoga Springs, NY | Two musical businesses celebrate grand opening as Saratoga Sound Center: Two musical businesses – Sixth Generation Strings and Off-Track Records – recently celebrated their grand opening in the Spa City as Saratoga Sound Center. A ribbon cutting ceremony with the Saratoga County Chamber of Commerce marked the official opening of Saratoga Sound Center, which includes a record shop as well as a string instrument sales and repair shop. Co-located on the lower level of 480 Broadway, the former site of Saratoga Guitar, Sixth Generation Strings and Off-Track Records opened over the summer and now welcome musicians and music lovers to their shared site in downtown Saratoga Springs. For Sixth Generation Strings, previously known as Sixth Generation Violin, the new space is a relocation from its former unit above street level on Broadway, while Off-Track Records is a brand new business.
Tri-Cities, WA | Primal vinyl: The Washington record stores we used to love: I started buying music at a young age. My mom always had the radio on in the car, and at some point, I noticed that my favorite songs were for sale on small vinyl singles called “45s.” On radio – which I also love – you had to wait for your favorite songs to come up in rotation. It didn’t take a genius to realize that I could listen to any song I wanted, as many times in-a-row as I wanted, if those Queen and Hall & Oates singles came home with me. Thus, a lifelong love affair with records was born. The formats changed over the years, from vinyl to cassette, cassette to CD, and CD to .mp3. No more need for a record store. Below are the biggest names from a bygone era, when record stores were King.
Northwich, UK | Vinyl Cafe aims to be a hub for Northwich music enthusiasts: A new record shop where music enthusiasts can mingle over a coffee and a slice of cake is now open in Northwich. The Vinyl Cafe on Station Road, which held an official opening event last Saturday, is the latest venture for businesswoman and music industry entrepreneur Sue Buckler. As well as selling a wide range of new release, classic and specialist vinyl, customers can expect regular events including vinyl clubs, book clubs, record launches, live sessions, and artist Q&As. Sue said: “Anyone who knows me knows that I live and breathe music. “I’ve spent 50 years in the record industry doing sales, promotion, marketing, radio, and it all started with a teenage job in a record shop. “It was Graduates Records in Walsall, who are now famous for being the label who signed UB40. “So when the opportunity came to open a vinyl cafe, I took it.”