
Post Malone, Taylor Swift, Gracie Abrams vinyl releases lead Record Store Day 2025 sales: The numbers are in and, unsurprisingly, some of today’s biggest pop stars had some of the top-selling releases for the April 2025 edition of Record Store Day. Billboard reports that according to Luminate, which tallies music sales, Post Malone Tribute to Nirvana was the top-selling Record Store Day album. The release was the audio of a livestream that Post Malone did in 2020, at the height of the pandemic, to raise money for the World Health Organization. Post, who was also this year’s Record Store Day ambassador, is donating all proceeds from the vinyl to MusiCares’ Mental Health & Addiction Recovery Services. In terms of albums, the second-biggest seller was Gracie Abrams‘ Live from Radio City Music Hall double LP.
Hopkins, MN | Mill City Sound announces new ownership for Hopkins record store: The Hopkins record store says the new owners won’t “mess with what makes this place magic.” Mill City Sound, the Hopkins record store that recently celebrated its 10th anniversary, has announced a new ownership team. The shop announced this week that Scott P. Sayer and Casey Andrus will take the reins, promising that the duo has “zero plans to mess with what makes this place magic.” “We’re not here to reinvent the wheel,” Andrus said in a statement. “We’re here to keep it turning—and maybe throw a few more records on the shelf while we’re at it.” The record store was founded by Rob Sheeley, who died earlier this year at age 69, per the Star Tribune. Mill City Sound’s announcement says that the new owners have taken the reins “with his blessing.”
Hillman City, WA | absorb records Brings Heavy-Hitting Dance and Electronic Music to Hillman City: Behind a set of white doors and frosted glass windows on Rainier Avenue is absorb records, a new record store bringing a dose of dance and electronic music from around the world to its corner of Hillman City. Opening last month, the cozy shop—run by two friends, Zack W. and Kayvon K.—presents a sharp and lovingly curated mix of independent record labels, far-out genres, and seasoned artists for the heads, DJs, and dance music acolytes to dive right into. Often, getting one’s hands on obscure records from small labels requires a focused internet query, shipping costs, and lots of patience. absorb’s ethos is to bridge that gap by bringing those records to a physical shop here in Seattle.
Mission Viejo, CA | The cop who owns a record shop: The Rasta-Cowboy Records owner can’t wait to go on his month-long African safari. Tom Serafin stands behind the checkout counter of his shop as he speaks about his upcoming adventure. “The neat thing about having a store and being a one-person shop is that several times a year I put a sign on the door that says ‘gone to get vinyl’ and I go and travel the world,” he says. But embarking on an African safari isn’t out of the ordinary for Serafin. He has plans to swim with the whales in New Zealand, work at a sea turtle rescue in Costa Rica, and live in Hawaii for a year, to name a few. “The only thing I’m missing is the trek with the gorillas,” he says, “you know where you go walking up with them, and I’ll do that next year.” Rasta-Cowboy Records is packed floor to ceiling with vinyl, CDs, cassettes your parents once had, books, classic 1980s movies, collectable action figures, clothes and other various items Serafin has collected…


The group that was the earliest incarnation of Badfinger was The Iveys, which included Ron Griffiths but not Joey Molland. Badfinger began with its contribution to the soundtrack albums of the film The Magic Christian (1970), starring Peter Sellers and Ringo Starr, with the Paul McCartney-penned “Come and Get It,” which was a big hit.



Let It Be hardly marked the end of their “too shitfaced to play” ethos, but it was, as Westerberg would note, “the first time I had songs that we arranged, rather than just banging out riffs and giving them titles.” “I Will Dare” is a bona fide slice of pop genius; “Unsatisfied” is “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” with more heart and more soul than the jaded Mick Jagger could summon up if you tossed him into a pile of cocaine and supermodels and let him stew until unhappy. But Westerberg hadn’t lost touch with his inner punk; songs like “Gary’s Got a Boner” and “We’re Comin’ Out” would have been right at home on 1982’s puke punk classic Stink.
From the press release: British-born, Berlin-based musician Annika Henderson, better known as Anika, has created her new, third album Abyss out of the frustration, anger, and confusion she feels from existing in our contemporary world. Notably heavier than her previous releases, the 10-track Abyss feels raw, urgent, and fuelled by strong emotions.

Chicago, IL | Chicago independent record stores spin back in an era of streaming: “Fascination” by David Bowie reverberates through the room as customers wander through the aisles of the downtown Evanston store Animal Records, sifting through vinyl records from artists like Janet Jackson to the Grateful Dead. The walls of the room are adorned in pink and yellow stripes with stuffed animals perched everywhere the eye can see. Animal Records owner Greg Allen waves to people as they enter his store, greeting regulars every so often with a casual, “How you doing?” “We’re just trying to keep it a happy, positive place,” he said. “If some people are interested in records, that’s great. But we don’t really care if somebody comes in, even if they don’t buy anything. If they just want to come in and hang out and talk, that’s good too.” Record stores, once a fixture of the past, have had a resurgence in the greater Chicago area in recent years. Not only are these stores a place to shop, but also
Beaverdale, IA | Beaverdale record store Vinyl Cup is moving. Here’s where it’s going: Beaverdale’s Vinyl Cup Records has been a hidden gem, but not for much longer. Currently located on the upper floor of the building that houses GoodSons Food & Spirits just north of the Beaver Avenue/Urbandale Avenue intersection, the vinyl records specialty shop will move to a street-level storefront on Beaver Avenue in downtown Beaverdale that was vacated when longtime outdoors outfitter Back Country recently closed. Loved by its patrons but admittedly hard to find, Vinyl Cup originally opened in 2017 in an even more obscure spot: owner Luke Dickens’ basement. He later moved it to a former yoga studio on the second floor at 2815 Beaver Ave. Dickens said that when Back Country owner Jay Kozel announced in February the store at 2702 Beaver Ave. would close after 41 years in Beaverdale 



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Canberra, AU | Where have all the records gone? Canberra’s secondhand vinyl market in freefall. The secondhand vinyl record market in Canberra has taken a bizarre twist, with almost all of the main stores closing down at the same time. While cost-of-living is an overarching issue, storeowners gave various reasons for shutting shop, some completely while others seek to embrace different business models. Interestingly, the new vinyl market remains relatively strong, as the long queues outside Landspeed on the recent Record Store Day can attest. Landspeed in Garema Place, Civic, continues as Canberra’s premier record shop, with Songland on the southside in Cooleman Court, Weston, also popular with record-buyers. Both stores dabble in secondhand records, but it’s the new release and reissues on vinyl that are attracting most buyers. So
Stansbury, AU | Yorke Peninsula’s new hidden gem sells vinyl records and books: Tucked away in Stansbury on the Yorke Peninsula and only open on select days, Peninsula Records and Books offers an eclectic mix of Australian authors and global vinyl. “We just wanted to provide a place where people could come and buy a brand-new or second-hand book or a record, because there wasn’t really anything like that in the area,” owner Kate explains. The idea grew from the online store, which was already gaining traction for Aussie authors before the couple decided to open a physical location. “We had it online for a while, and it was doing quite well. Then we thought, why don’t we open it up down in Stansbury since we had the space?” says Kate. 











































