Record Store Day – Bandwidth http://bandwidth.wamu.org WAMU 88.5's New Music Site Tue, 02 Oct 2018 15:23:36 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=4.5.2 Joe’s Record Paradise Launches Crowdfunding Campaign To Save Itself http://bandwidth.wamu.org/joes-record-paradise-launches-crowdfunding-campaign-to-save-itself/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/joes-record-paradise-launches-crowdfunding-campaign-to-save-itself/#comments Fri, 15 Apr 2016 15:48:15 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=63566 After relocating from one Silver Spring location to another, Maryland record shop Joe’s Record Paradise says it’s hurting for cash. Thursday the 42-year-old business launched a GoFundMe campaign with a goal of $30,000, money it hopes will help cover income lost during an arduous reopening process.

The move to 8700 Georgia Ave. turned out to be more complicated than expected, says the store’s owner, Johnson Lee. He’d planned to reopen the shop last month, but he says he didn’t realize he needed to obtain a building permit from Montgomery County to open a retail operation in the building’s basement.

The space was previously occupied by Hearts & Homes for Youth, a nonprofit now headquartered in Burtonsville. In Montgomery County, a commercial change of use requires a new building permit.

“When you have a change of use at the place, you have to really do a lot more, and think about fulfilling requirements that you just may not know about,” Lee says, “and that is a risk.”

While Lee scrambles to meet county requirements, Joe’s Record Paradise remains closed. Most challenging, he says, is missing out on annual vinyl event Record Store Day this weekend.

“Not having that nice chunk from Record Store Day I was going to use to pay off things” is difficult, Lee says. He adds that he’s been selling off his personal record collection to make ends meet.

Lee says he’s especially concerned about retaining staff during the transition. “I just want to be able to get my employees taken care of,” the store owner says.

The GoFundMe campaign has raised more than $5,000 as of Friday morning.

Photo by Flickr user David Hilowitz used under a Creative Commons license.

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Record Store Day: A Guide To The Guides http://bandwidth.wamu.org/record-store-day-a-guide-to-the-guides/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/record-store-day-a-guide-to-the-guides/#respond Fri, 18 Apr 2014 17:44:34 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=30671 Today, newspapers and websites all over the United States—and surely numerous other countries—are writing about Record Store Day, which takes place internationally tomorrow. Not being much of a record buyer anymore, I probably shouldn’t tell you what releases to look for at local shops tomorrow. But I can point you in the direction of people who have done that capably.

So here it is: Bandwidth’s quick-and-dirty guide to the Record Store Day buying guides.

Keep in mind not all of these releases are guaranteed to be sold in D.C. stores. Always call ahead!

1. The Los Angeles Times’ Pop & Hiss blog says you should buy…
Chuck Inglish and Chance the Rapper, Haim, Fleetwood Mac, The Julie Ruin, The Animals, and Heavens to Besty, among many others

2. Pitchfork says you should buy…
A lot of trendy titles, including Oneohtrix Point Never, Just Friends, and the Merchandise/Destruction Unit/Milk Music split; and some not-totally-trendy items like Conor Oberst, Gil Scott-Heron, R.E.M., and Bruce Springsteen

3. Brooklyn Vegan says you should buy…
Die Kreuzen, the Merchandise/Destruction Unit/Milk Music split, Life Without Buildings, Alexander Robotnick, and a whole lot more

4. Rolling Stone says you should buy…
The glow-in-the-dark “Ghostbusters” 10-inch; “The Re-Organization of Pop” box set, Mastodon, Big Mama Thornton, lots of indie rock, and Skrillex (on cassette)

5. NPR’s “All Songs Considered” says you should buy…
Bruce Springsteen, Devo, The Pogues, Lydia Loveless, Dana Falconberry, and The Orwells

6. MTV says you should buy…
Black Lips, Sky Ferreira, and Green Day, among other youthy releases

… and DCist and D.C. Music Download both have helpful lists of what local stores will have what tomorrow. Take note: Joe’s Record Paradise is hosting a live performance from D.C.’s The Blackbyrds, the storied group behind the D.C. anthem “Rock Creek Park.”

Photo by Flickr user Will Folsom used under a Creative Commons license.

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Can Small Record Shops Keep Up With Record Store Day? http://bandwidth.wamu.org/can-small-record-shops-keep-up-with-record-store-day/ http://bandwidth.wamu.org/can-small-record-shops-keep-up-with-record-store-day/#comments Fri, 21 Mar 2014 15:33:55 +0000 http://bandwidth.wamu.org/?p=26531 Record Store Day announced its complete slate of 2014 releases Thursday—all 438 of them.

That’s a big increase from 2013, let alone 2008, when Record Store Day debuted with just a handful of special titles. Is this getting a little bonkers?

“It’s out of control,” says Neal Becton, who owns D.C. shop Som Records. Some business owners say Record Store Day records are too expensive and too numerous, and stores risk losing a lot of money on records that don’t sell.

This wasn’t how Record Store Day was supposed to be. The twice-annual event, which takes place April 19 this year and on Black Friday, was started to help support record shops. It makes special records exclusively available to independent brick-and-mortar stores to drum up business, and it’s been quite a hit, at least judging from the lines that form outside of stores on the big day.

But in a Washington Post story about the event last year, Red Onion Records owner Josh Harkavy was quoted as calling the event “Record Label Day” because of a perception that labels are its true beneficiaries. That sentiment hasn’t changed. Crooked Beat shop owner Bill Daly says some of the vinyl slabs are so costly, no one is buying. “Customers balk at a certain price,” he says. He cites a 2013 Nick Drake release that, at nearly $40 retail, barely moved from his shelves—even though Drake is a reliable seller at his store. “It stiffed, basically,” Daly says. He bought 40 copies at $27 a pop, and still has two dozen left.

Most shop owners would tell you that Record Store Day is more about exposure than making money, because the profit margins just aren’t that high. But it’s also considered a must-do. Buyers mob local stores to buy the day’s special reissues, fancy pressings, and exclusive recordings, which can help generate new customers and move regular stock in addition to the exclusive stuff. For those reasons alone, some owners wouldn’t even consider not buying in. “You kind of have to,” says Becton. “It’s our busiest day of the year by far.” Johnson Lee, owner of Joe’s Record Paradise in Silver Spring, agrees. “It’s definitely the best day of the year, as far as sales.”

But Daly says he’s still holding on to between 700 and 800 Record Store Day releases that never sold, and he expects to add more to the pile this April. The Crooked Beat owner says he ordered copies of about 400 Record Store Day releases this time. But come 2015, he’s cutting back. He says he plans to purchase no more than 150 RSD titles next year, because there’s no way he could sell all the stock he needs to turn a profit.

“It’s going to bankrupt the store,” Daly says.

For what it’s worth, Record Store Day co-founder Michael Kurtz agrees. “I don’t think we’ll ever go above 450 [releases],” he says in a phone call from Los Angeles. It’s just too much for the stores they aspire to help. “Most of them are mom-and-pop stores, and that’s a lot of money that they have to pay out.”

Shops don’t have to buy all 438 releases, of course. Not all of them are even available to every store—many are extremely limited runs, and some are only available regionally—and owners can pick and choose which ones they think will do well. Kurtz says most small businesses focus on between 200 and 300 titles. Becton is even more selective: He says he ordered around 100 this year. Lee says he ordered about $5,000 worth of stock, and doesn’t expect to actually get that much. But Daly is a heavy buyer—last year, he claimed to have purchased more RSD vinyl than most shops on the East Coast—and as the Record Store Day list grows, he becomes more worried. “Every year they keep adding more and more,” he says. “It’s just the greed of the major labels.”

Kurtz quibbles with the idea that labels are to blame. “I think that’s just a lack of knowledge,” he says. He contends that many artists and labels don’t turn a hefty profit, if any, on Record Store Day. When bands record new material just for RSD releases, that costs money, he says. Manufacturing small numbers of records instead of big pressings is extra costly, too. Then shipping the vinyl from place to place—well, it all adds up, Kurtz says, and plenty of bands take a haircut.

“The bands are doing it to help the stores,” Kurtz says. “Most [Record Store Day titles] are sold for less than they cost to make, and [shop owners] just don’t know it.”

Still, small shops have good reasons to be more selective about which Record Store Day releases they buy: The stock is nonreturnable, and some of it can depreciate rapidly after the event. The key to winning Record Store Day may be to do what Becton and Lee do: Buy a little, and increase your chances of selling all of it in one day, even if it means some folks walk out empty-handed. If stores buy everything they think their customers want, they could wind up with heaps of overstock that they simply can’t push out of the door.

“That’s kind of what happens on Record Store Day,” Daly says. “It’s a roll of the dice.”

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