
Aotearoa, NZ | Gen Z is driving the resurgence of vinyl in Aotearoa New Zealand: In the past 20 years, vinyl sales in New Zealand have increased 100-fold, with more than half of all tracked vinyl sales occurring in the last four years. Gen Z is embracing the authenticity, collectability and the all-around experience vinyl offers. Auckland University of Technology (AUT) student and avid vinyl collector JD Kim says the main reason he collects vinyl is for the sound quality, as it beats digital streaming. “And a separate perk is the physical, permanent copy.” Flying Out Records on Auckland’s Pitt Street has seen an increase in Gen Z customers buying records, according to employee Hunter Keane. He says many of these customers are drawn to records for reasons that go beyond convenience.
Cincinnati, OH | From vinyl records to retro video games, the appeal of physical media: According to the Pew Research Center, 83 percent of American adults use streaming services to watch television and movies. And streaming services aren’t limited to those categories — you can listen to music, play video games, and read newspapers without ever touching a physical version. But there are those who say that collecting physical versions of your favorite forms of media is an important thing to do. On Cincinnati Edition, the physical media collecting craze.
UK | ‘Undertale’, ‘Cyberpunk 2077’ and ‘Pokémon’ soundtracks to get vinyl Record Store Day 2026 release: The 19th annual Record Store Day UK takes place April 18. Record Store Day takes place next month and gamers can expect vinyl releases of Undertale, Cyberpunk 2077 and Pokémon soundtracks. The 19th Record Store Day is set to take place on Saturday April 18, celebrating independent record shops and vinyl culture in the UK. More than 300 UK and Ireland record shops will be taking part alongside thousands of indie retailers worldwide, selling an array of exclusive physical releases.
Amersham, UK | Rob Brydon’s new BBC comedy filming at Amersham Record Shop: A new BBC comedy series starring Rob Brydon has started filming at a Bucks town record shop. Parking suspensions are in place in Amersham New Town, and The Record Shop has closed for the filming of Bill’s Included, featuring the Gavin and Stacey actor. The show is about a well-meaning but overenthusiastic divorcee who rents his spare rooms to students to stay afloat. Photos shared by Liberal Democrat councillor for Amersham and Chesham Bois, Mark Roberts, show film crews setting up outside the shop and production vans along Hill Avenue. Cllr Roberts stated: “You may have noticed that there is filming going on today in Top Amersham. This shoot is for a BBC Comedy—”Bill’s Included”—and they’ll be filming at the Record Store today and tomorrow.






But it was! Seals & Crofts in the flesh! And they were wondering if they could move in with us for a couple of days because times were tough and they were tired of living in a lean-to by the railroad tracks running past the lake of toxic sludge near the abandoned nuclear reactor.


Philadelphia, PA | Doorfront to Storefront: SOOK Vinyl & Vintage: For Rashied Amon, owner of SOOK Vinyl & Vintage, Mt. Airy is the perfect location to have a business. “I love having a business in this neighborhood,” Amon said. “The people here are very personable, it’s very walkable, and there’s a lot of synergy among the businesses.” In 2026, Amon and other small business owners in Mt. Airy will try to use this synergy to their advantage. With the semiquincentennial (America’s 250th birthday), the FIFA World Cup, and the MLB All-Star Game all set to bring plenty of people to Philadelphia this year, there are countless opportunities for businesses to benefit from this influx of tourism. However, with many of these events happening downtown, businesses in the Northwest neighborhoods are faced with a unique opportunity: drawing tourists.
IA | How many vinyl record stores are there in Eastern Iowa? With Record Store Day on the way April 18th, we’re taking a look at some of the record stores that are thriving here in Eastern Iowa! 2025 was a HUGE year for vinyl. Deadline recently reported that, for the first time since 1983, the Recording Industry Association of America says it surpassed the $1 billion sales mark! In a world of streaming, it’s shocking to see how many people are still turning to physical forms of music. As a bit of a collector myself, I think that many people enjoy the nostalgia of it, as well as the warm, crackly sound of the record. Wondering where you can get new and used records here in Eastern Iowa? 



First year in the dorms at Shippensburg College Aerosmith were inescapable, what with my floor’s resident dope dealers Sheesh and Shrooms cranking the Toxic Twins around the clock, and I’ll never forget the day in the dining hall I warned ‘em Aerosmith would rot their brains, and if they really wanted to improve their minds they’d switch to Frank Zappa! Who at the time, if I recall correctly, was producing such IQ-raising fare as “Crew Slut” and “Wet T-Shirt Nite”!

Calling Genesis a period piece will automatically impact some readers as a putdown, in part due to many folks’ yardstick of measurement for the art of the past relating directly to whether or not it’s relevant to right now. On the other end of the spectrum, at least a few of Wendy & Bonnie’s most passionate fans surely prize the duo’s only LP precisely because it is indeed so evocative of the time and circumstances of its making.
Burlington, VT | Julian Hackney to Take Over Speaking Volumes Record Store in Burlington: The Rough Francis guitarist is purchasing the South End Burlington music and repair shop next month. Speaking Volumes Record Store & Repair Shop in Burlington will change hands in April. Owner Norbert Ender, who first launched Speaking Volumes as a used bookstore in 2006 on Pine Street, is selling his offshoot record store on Marble Avenue to Burlington entrepreneur and musician Julian Hackney. Hackney, 39, is the founder of the ginger beer company Young at Heart and the guitarist for local punk band Rough Francis. While he’s excited to run a record store, it wasn’t necessarily a challenge he’d planned to take on. “Never in my life would I imagine that I’d own a record store,” Hackney told Seven Days. “But, I mean, it literally fell into my lap.
Long Beach, CA | Bagatelle Records closed suddenly after 50 years. Now it will reopen under new ownership. The vinyl collectors institution closed last fall with owner Steve Mintz’s passing. It was missed so much that would-be customers sometimes banged on the windows, hoping they could get back in. After months of silent speakers and empty aisles, one of Long Beach’s favorite record stores is spinning back to life, giving music lovers and vinyl collectors the renewed thrill of flipping through records and rediscovering forgotten favorites. Long cherished as a cornerstone of the local music scene, Bagatelle Records plans to reopen in April, bringing back thousands of 









































