@@thebossman60 im 16 now and i have over 500 records in my collection. many different things. my favourite artist is patti smith, i have a japanese copy of her album easter, and a white label promo of easter aswell, along with a 1976 bootleg of one of her shows. the local record stores near me all know me by name, and are sometimes shocked about the albums i ask them for. theres also a local record show that happens twice a year and ive actually sold stuff there a few times, so you could also say im somewhat of a record dealer. just thought id update stuff from my previous comment :)
Absolutely loved this documentary. I work a "sensible" job that sucks the soul from my body on a daily basis. I catch myself fantasizing about which album I'll pick up next several times throughout each day... And when I am forced to recognize the inescapable truth which is that my time on this earth is finite, I know that each moment I'm not running a record store is a sin. Thanks for further inspiration to lead a life of passion.
My home is decorated with framed albums that were pivotal to my youth. EVERYBODY who comes to my house spends a great amount if time just browsing the walls. Amazing how many people find that special one that calls to them. They'll pause and just stare at it smiling. Reach up and are compelled to touch it. Even though its behind glass you'll catch em running their fingers all over it without even realizing it. Had people stop themselves and say "Sorry man"! I just laugh and say "Hey that's not only what they're there for. That's WHY they're there".
yea its so addictive especially if you experiment with them.. i never use them to scratch but sometimes sample . im a artist/producer and record collector.. i have approx 5,000 records and i make beats as well as episodes and such.. took a break behind the scenes over the last little while and about to relaunch here are just some samples of records i have i hope you enjoy .first and foremost i do it for passion since a kid. 1 love to everyone enjoying records.. maybe alot of you have the same ones.. My Records Records page facebook.com/yardi.black.5/media_set?set=a.933158113464547&type=3 My Beats facebook.com/yardi.black.5/media_set?set=a.933158113464547&type=3
Nice doc. I'm 58 and have been buying vinyl since 1971. I've seen it all come full circle. I had reel to reels, 8 tracks, cassettes, vinyl, cd, & mp3's. I had one full collection that I sold back in 2001 all vinyl probably close to 3000. Over the last 10 years I have been buying and reacquiring alot of what I had in my 1st collection. I buy alot of new vinyl and buy alot of used vinyl online on and in used shops around here. It is very refreshing to see vinyl come back. The negatives are the prices but if I want it I buy it.
Here we are 7 years later and vinyl is alive and well, some would say it's actually booming. I live in a city in northern Canada with a population of about a 1,000,000 people. There certainly is no shortage of new and used record stores in my city. I can't possibly begin to afford all of the great vinyl that's available on the market today.
Thanks WhiskeyBender for uploading this mini doc: about the the of buying music albums on Vinyl,CD's and MP3's.I'm old school with my music.I buy Vinyl & CD's and record them on to tape cassettes. Peace.
Playing and listening to a vinyl album was like a ceremony. Pulling the record out the record, placing it on the turntable. Using a Disc Washer and a Dust Bug setup. listening to the album, reading the lyrics, liner notes and checking out the artwork of the jacket and sometimes the record sleeve. Those things presented the full artistic experience.
Agreed. It's like smoking a pipe, vs. smoking a cigarette. The former is a ritual, with skills to be learned and apparatus to be used. The latter is just a flitting experience.
I just don’t understand the people who could possibly give this a thumbs down. I simply don’t. You have obviously never owned nor formed a relationship with music through a record shop. And!.. vinyl is doing very well as it is by far the best selling physical medium for music. You can buy it from Walmart and drug stores! (Buy from smaller shops as they are the true vanguards.) Regardless, this is all about the beauty of vinyl, record stores, and how much better music is when you buy it from a brick and mortar record shop. It’s the best. I could have a long, passionate conversation with absolutely everyone in this mini documentary because we all belong to the same sub culture & community.
Thanks for putting this on. As the former owner of Blasters in Kissimmee, FL, I applaud any one that has owned or supported any independent Record Store from Providence RI to South Beach Miami. And much respect to the Winter Music Conference for also keeping vinyl alive. Peace.
I grew up with vinyl in the early 80s and just started getting back into it. It's feels so much more special to listen to a record than listening to music digitally. Something about a vinyl that I just love so much.
Don't I know it, when I was a kid I kept my records on my bedroom windowsill, until one particularly hot summer when I found they all changed shape, lol, lesson learned.
I feel very fortunate to have experienced the fun of going into independent record stores and finding some gems I was looking for and also the surprises that awaited.
I used to play my parents records all the time so they bought me my own record player when I was 9 years old, I guess so I would live their stereo alone, this was in 1968. I went out and purchased my first record that day, Vladimir Horowitz Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No.2, that started my collection, never cared for CD’s, only to play them in the car maybe. Today my collection has grown to over 15 thousand albums; it includes all genres, from classical to jazz, rock, vintage Cuban orchestras from the 1930’s, 40’s & 50’s to Big Band and beyond on 33, 45 and rare 78's. I still have my first record. I’ll never change my records for anything other format.
Sometimes I become sentimental when I look back in time, seeing older movies, seeing old documentaries and so on. In this case not, we have 2020 and all this changed. Vinyl is back and when you look back 8 years you see how good this is.
I'm 14, I started a vinyl collection about a year ago, and my first record that I got was Queen's the Game. I have maybe 20 records now and some of the records shown in the documentary, I own. Like the first American Beatles album, the Rolling Stones album with the zipper, and London Calling by the clash.
I lost about 20 records that I lost in a house fire,in 1993. I started my search,to replace the albums that I lost. I stopped counting at 1000,and that was quite awhile ago....... I own a lot of cassettes,and cd's......... but vinyl albums,is where it's at for me.
Nothing can ever replace that awesome feeling of flipping through stacks & boxes & piles of records...The smell of the vinyl. That feeling you get when your flipping through & spot that 1 record you have been looking for. 🙌📻🎶
I love vinyl. I can remember as a kid I grew up listening to my parents record collections. My mum's was stuff like Isley Brothers, Charlie Rich, Shadows, and my dad's was Elvis Presley. My dad got me into Elvis in a big way and I'm now a big Elvis fan. Cd's are good but once you've popped a disc into the player and press play, that's it really. With vinyl there's just something about taking a record out of the sleeve, placing it on the turntable and hearing that click as the needle goes into the groove. And after about 20 minutes you get up and flip the record over, but that adds to the fun of playing records. You just don't get that with CDs. Long live vinyl.
a visit to a "real" record store is always a treat.you can get lost in the records for hours and the whole time someone is asking to hear an album that you've never heard and you become educated to a whole different type of music you never had in your music world.you buy that LP and now your enjoying a new experience.so then you go back to look for more of that artist/music type and then someone is sampling another LP you just can't live w/o.It's insane,I love it!
Before the internet killed the art of record hunting I used to visit America from the UK. I would pick a city get a transit pass and a map on which I would mark the record shops then trawl through them all. Chicago was the best! I mean cheap and loads of variety. Last time I went was about 1995 I think. Happy days.
I'm a 90s kid. I loved going to the music store. Used to have such a great CD collection, sadly I sold off over half of it over the years. Still have close to 200. Just put together a new stereo together this year and got my first turntable. Now that you can convert vinyl to mp3s I started collecting vinyl. Just got about 300 hand me down albums so I'm well on my way to having a nice collection. I really do wish there were more stores around but I live in the rurals so only thing I got is wall Mart. Still every grocery shopping day I stop and look through the vinyl.
i love the feeling when your searching through a bunch of records and you find that one record you were not expecting to find and your just like oh shit i gotta have this.
I inherited my fathers record collection and it kick started everything for me. Spent several days going through the collection, cleaning and re-sleeving 100's of records. I was hooked. My happiest moments are discovering records stores and going in to find my next grail album.
My first record I bought was toys in the attic. I was 7. I still have it and listen to it! I love vinyl. And to the owner of Deadwax. I got a record from you and thanks for the sticker!!
The first vinyl that i evr bought or received was just two years ago. I always was intrigued to listen to vinyls and the turntable that we had has been broken for more than 10 years so my parents bougth me and my brothers a turntable and they gave me my first record which was the Minor Threat LP.
I have a HUGE vinyl collection...Buying them since I was a teenager in the 70s...one time I bought a CD of a record I already had so that I could play it in my car...but it sounded flat...I was gravely disappointed...so I recorded my vinyl record to a CD...it was better, but still didn't have all the ups and downs that the vinyl did...
Second Hand Tunes, Val’s Halla, Dr. Wax (Hyde Park) JR’s, Jimmy’s (87th Ashland) all got a lot of my money!!! I still love going to physical stores...you can stumble upon some real gems.
This was a blast to watch! I'm a Chicago record store supporter. Something I truly love is the willingness to help a customer, whether the store gets the sale or not. I stopped into Logan Hardware in search of an album, and they searched their database to find out that Dusty Groove on Ashland had a copy. I called Dusty Groove to verify, asked for a few more titles, and they were bagged up and ready for me when I walked in.
The last comment says it all..."It's just knowing it's there...it's the most important thing". I cherish my 5000 LP collection, which I started collecting about 1968....and it grew to about 20,000 at one point...sold a lot of it on Ebay, which I do regret at times, but at the same time, I know those records went to good homes, and I know someone is still enjoying them. And, I still have enough LPs to listen to!!! CDs and MP3s are okay for the car or computer, but like it's said in this film, "There's just something about putting on a Vinyl LP and listening to it, flipping it over after 20 minutes, and just enjoying the warmth and sound of the music." Just not too much that's better than that!! I always hope there will be records stores to go to!!
First records I bought were the red singles album by The Beatles and More Hot Rocks by The Rolling Stones. Didn't even own a record player till about a year later but I would just read the covers and like the feel of the vinyl. Two years later now and I've recently hit 200 records in my collection!
The current prices aren't "bad", compared to the madness of the late 90s/early 00s. CDs were easily 25 and going up to 40. And even at that point, despite being touted initially as being incredibly long lived as archival storage, people were already noticing the foil breaking down and the CD itself becoming worn from use. Vinyl is still a better archival format which is why I have a small collection from my favourite bands.
What/where were you buying?!? I was in high school at the time & buying tons of music. I remember average cds being USD $16-18, more expensive ones ~20. Cheaper ones 12. Used 4-10. I can't recall ever paying >25 for a single CD. LPs could be $16-18 but I remember most being $12. 7"s were almost always $4 new. Ignoring inflation, I don't think the price of cds has changed much at all. Records however have become a niche special collector commodity & the price has jumped up significantly. The industry knew not as many people would buy but if they made tangible music feel more special (vinyl, box sets etc) they could charge more to a smaller niche crowd.
How do CDs become "worn" from use? Nothing touches the CD...you do know that right? I have hundreds of CDs, many are from the early 90s,never have i had one "wear" out or had "the foil" break down. I have never had one skip or not play.
@@Jay_Kayy you didnt answer my question though, how do CDs become worn from use? There is no stylus to wear out the CD,so please explain. I just realised you didnt make the original comment. I was actually asking "volatile Sky" who did not respond.
The first record I bought (actually my Grandma gave me the money to buy it) was when I was a 2nd grader in 1985, it was "The TV Theme Song Sing-Along Album", purchased at the local K-Mart. I still have it to this day...
I grew up in the 1960s - 1970s, so in my early years of course records were The medium for music. I never gave up on them, never got rid of them, and I still buy them at estate sales and thrift stores to get odd stuff on the cheap. But --- CDs beat the hell out of records for sound quality, and I will buy material on them preferentially. The experience of flipping through the bins at stores is a priceless part of life, and is much missed in these days when there aren't so many stores to visit.
the first lp for me was merely by accident, because that day i did not have enough money " like many teens" for a cd, but then i stumbled upon the allman brothers band idle wild south. i thought it was cool and wallah i began collecting and developing a deep sense of appreciation for the art and format of the vinyl LP, and now just a couple years later i have thousands of records. It's addictive.
My first LP was “The Monkees Headquarters on Colgems Records in 1967. My mother got me my first record player that year with Frontier trading stamp she collected from the grocery store. That started a lifetime hobby of buying records, then 8 track and cassette tapes and compact discs. The past three years I bought a turntable and stated record collecting again. Like others I sold my original record collection when I lost interest in records and bought CD’s. I sure wish I hadn’t sold my records because I had a collection that could never be replaced.
Great documentary on LPs. I always visit my local record stores with my coffee and immerse myself. When I go I usually do my hw or know what I want to purchase. Sometimes I just go in because my passion is music and I want to see the physical artwork. Unfortunately the new generation was instant gratification and cannot fathom the idea of something physically created by a human being. I mean it must be so hard to physically move ones ass to change a LP much less putting in a CD.
Record stores should be put in a historical protective act. by the time i'm 30 in 15 years most of these places will sadly die and i love my records the music you can't explain to someone who uses mp3s.
Records are like works of art and some people collect them for the artwork on the covers as much as for the music and part of the appeal is also the tactile aspect of owning them. It's so good to see young folk getting into it for the first time. That's what'll keep it going.
I was born in December of 1979 and I remember my mother's nice Pioneer turntable and loud expensive sound system and she even had one of those wood finished light organs. I as a kid had a little Fisher Price record player and I remember my older cousin Mark letting me listen to Thriller when I was a kid and he'd come stay over. Cassettes are more what I remember buying my music on because I could take them with me and a little yellow walkman to listen to at school or ride my bike. I tried getting into CDs but oh man those portable players would skip like crazy if you even walked quickly. I'm getting back into vinyl now, however it's such an expensive hobby that it's not easy for the working class. I remember days of basically records being give away at local yard sales, now you can't find a one. It's unfair because a lot of upper middle class to rich hipster types living with having a silver spoon are making the joy of vinyl unattainable to regular folks. I mean look at Adele's new album it's $39 on vinyl and same with a lot of others. There's no local mom and pop record stores near me in rural isolated southwestern VA and so Walmart is pretty much it for vinyl and even they're outrageously priced. I just hope the resurgence of even the cheap suitcase players brings this hobby down in price so it can be enjoyed by everyone. I don't need a rare ultra expensive record on vinyl, I'd just like to have some of the stuff I enjoyed in the 80s and had on cassette in my vinyl collection. I love and always have loved since middle school Depeche Mode, but their vinyl's are out of reach for me as far as price. I'm just happy to have a Jeff Buckley, the Footloose Soundtrack and two Nirvana records. Probably the most expensive two I've got are A Perfect Circle Thirteenth Step and Rammstein's newest vinyl with the matchstick and the only reason I have the second is it was a gift someone got me because I couldn't justify paying $40+ for a record.
I picked up 3 45's " Time Of The Season " , " Spill The Wine " & "Long Cool Woman In A Black 👗 " For a kid , I had good taste ! Wish I had picked up Big 🌟 as a cutout !
"Anything truly good in life requires some effort." That quote is by me. It's what I've come up with to help explain to those who can't understand why people still listen to vinyl or CDs or tapes. The physical music format is a big part of the listening experience. I do have Spotify premium and I use it as a means of listening to new artists and if I like what I hear, I track down a means to purchase a physical copy. So the effort I speak of is, finding that artist online, purchasing the physical copy, and playing it through your stereo. Even just playing it on your stereo is a ritual in itself. And it's enjoyable as hell.
I still like going to the independent record store. I have bought off of ebay but I prefer to be able to check on the condition myself and interacting with employees
first 2 albums I bought from Woolworths was "Meet the Beatles" and "Beatles For Sale" when I was 10 yrs old from selling newspapers in Brooklyn circa 1965..the next day I shoplifted another album.the "Dave Clark five" ... basically I shoplifted a bunch. still got them.
Terry Jacks Seasons in the sun and have no idea how old I was.I am 54 now and was a kid then. My parents had records and I played mine on their record player. I now have all their records plus about 1000 more..
Great documentary I owned Blue Note Records in North Miami Beach for 25 years and can totally relate. Long live the indi record shops. My first 45 was Jerry Lee Lewis "High school Confidential" and the 1st LP was Bob Dylan/Bob Dylan..
really nice documentary, I buy vinyl & cd by internet (amazon, ebay, distros) but the experience of being on a Record Store, mainly the small and specialized record stores , the talk, the search, has no fuckin´ price, I buy records since 1986 and I can still remember all my afternoons saturday in No Limits Records, listening and listening music and bands, just to buy one vinyl or cassette. Ten years ago I opened my own record store "Undeground and Below" pure Metal, were a couple of the Best years of my life. Thanks for so many to the music, the physical format, the passion. Long life to vinyl ! :)
I think they were more ripping on the companies trying to cash in on Herb Albert by re-releasing overpriced copies of albums you can still buy the originals of, cheap.
18:51 haha, In The Aeroplane Over The Sea was the first record I ever bought! It must've been over a decade ago at this point. A fantastic record front to back.
My first record was "Michael Jackson/thriller" back in 1984, March actually, I was 14! I spent a year and a half telling my friends I was going to buy it! So I bought it from the department store "Roses" (when they were a bigger store), went to the car while my mom continued to shop! I remember just being floored by the art work, and when I put that disc on the family turntable, aw man! I'll always remember that experience! That's why I've always been fascinated by them, even when I was playing CD'S , I pretended in my mind they were record's! Even when i streamed it later on , I played it start to finish like record's! And now I've come back home!
I'm young-ish (30 years old), so I only started collecting records about 5 years ago. After getting my first player, the first album I bought was Caro Emerald's Deleted Scenes From the Cutting Room Floor. I just inherited a bunch of records from my parents. There are about 150 LPs and about 25 singles. My parents just had them in storage, but they knew I'd appreciate having them. Some of them were originally owned by my parents when they were younger, some of them were originally owned by my grandparents (which were eventually passed on to my parents), and some of them were originally owned by my great-grandmother (which were passed on to my grandparents and then to my parents). So there are three generations worth of records here passed on to the fourth. On many of my grandparents' and great-grandmother's records, they even wrote on the back of the jacket the exact date they bought it. It's like a family time capsule. Each one is a memory, not just of the music, but of the person who owned it. So I'm really enjoying going through them. I'm cleaning them up and recording each one. I plan to put all of the recordings on an mp3 player to give to my dad. Both my grandparents (my dad's parents) recently passed away. I want to give my dad a way to still listen to his parents' and grandparents' music. I think he'll really like that.
Almost 17 getting a record player for christmas and records for my birth day. Cant get enough of this music. its expensive though.$20 - $50 for a new album.
Shops like Woolworth's and in Scotland, John Menzie's (now W.H. Smith's) used to sell records as well as record stores so there were lots of shops to buy records from. John Menzie's was where I got most of mine.
im 14, and i have a record collection of 42! walking into a record store is always the best feeling
You are an old soul. Never change.
@@thebossman60 im 16 now and i have over 500 records in my collection. many different things. my favourite artist is patti smith, i have a japanese copy of her album easter, and a white label promo of easter aswell, along with a 1976 bootleg of one of her shows.
the local record stores near me all know me by name, and are sometimes shocked about the albums i ask them for. theres also a local record show that happens twice a year and ive actually sold stuff there a few times, so you could also say im somewhat of a record dealer. just thought id update stuff from my previous comment :)
i still have every vinyl album and 45 i ever bought. never threw anything away. and im now going on 62 years old.
Support your local independent records store.
+James Klatt and your local drug dealer
+matchek broski every neighbourhood has one!
22 caliber
Does anyone have a non-local drug dealer?
Matchek Broski I do both.
Non-hipster People who genuinely listen to vinyl are a different breed of humanity that think different. And I’m proud to be associated with them.
Me too
Hipsters helped keep some record stores in business to be completely fair.
I don't care what category you try to wedge me in. I just plain love music. I do find it lamentable though that the popular taste is what it is.
What’s bad with hipsters?
Absolutely loved this documentary. I work a "sensible" job that sucks the soul from my body on a daily basis. I catch myself fantasizing about which album I'll pick up next several times throughout each day... And when I am forced to recognize the inescapable truth which is that my time on this earth is finite, I know that each moment I'm not running a record store is a sin. Thanks for further inspiration to lead a life of passion.
So are you running a record shop now
My home is decorated with framed albums that were pivotal to my youth. EVERYBODY who comes to my house spends a great amount if time just browsing the walls. Amazing how many people find that special one that calls to them. They'll pause and just stare at it smiling. Reach up and are compelled to touch it. Even though its behind glass you'll catch em running their fingers all over it without even realizing it. Had people stop themselves and say "Sorry man"! I just laugh and say "Hey that's not only what they're there for. That's WHY they're there".
Seems Dated. It's 2019 Vinyl has made a big come back! You should do a part 2!
I feel like vinyl is on a 7 year cycle for the last 25 -30 years of being 'dead' and then making a comeback
Did you not watch the second half of the video? Pretty much all the talk about is they return of vinyl and it's popularity.
yea its so addictive especially if you experiment with them.. i never use them to scratch but sometimes sample . im a artist/producer and record collector.. i have approx 5,000 records and i make beats as well as episodes and such.. took a break behind the scenes over the last little while and about to relaunch here are just some samples of records i have i hope you enjoy .first and foremost i do it for passion since a kid. 1 love to everyone enjoying records.. maybe alot of you have the same ones.. My Records Records page facebook.com/yardi.black.5/media_set?set=a.933158113464547&type=3
My Beats facebook.com/yardi.black.5/media_set?set=a.933158113464547&type=3
agreed man...
FLAC and dsd also kills' mp3's short cummings...and i got a new record this week it was compressed!
and after covid pandemic... vinyl records are here to stay for over other formats! Great!
The pandemic teaches me to loved music especially the old ones and now im very obssessed to vinyl record.
this film is both relevant, and awesome all at the same time. long live vinyl.
Nice doc. I'm 58 and have been buying vinyl since 1971. I've seen it all come full circle. I had reel to reels, 8 tracks, cassettes, vinyl, cd, & mp3's. I had one full collection that I sold back in 2001 all vinyl probably close to 3000. Over the last 10 years I have been buying and reacquiring alot of what I had in my 1st collection. I buy alot of new vinyl and buy alot of used vinyl online on and in used shops around here. It is very refreshing to see vinyl come back. The negatives are the prices but if I want it I buy it.
Here we are 7 years later and vinyl is alive and well, some would say it's actually booming. I live in a city in northern Canada with a population of about a 1,000,000 people. There certainly is no shortage of new and used record stores in my city. I can't possibly begin to afford all of the great vinyl that's available on the market today.
4 years later and vinyl is the most sold physical media. In Japan, the medium never died out.
As a vinyl collector myself I enjoyed this video, Thank you.
Idk why YT recommended this old video but I still enjoyed it
the vinyl is back, in fact it never left, just took a breath to come back with more strength, like if you are agree,
it left the ´´reel rich´´ ? ?xD üno n inö id suxD only the others do ´´möre´´ ^ ^
Gayest fucking thing I have ever read
Thanks WhiskeyBender for uploading this mini doc: about the the of buying music
albums on Vinyl,CD's and MP3's.I'm old school with my music.I buy Vinyl & CD's
and record them on to tape cassettes. Peace.
Playing and listening to a vinyl album was like a ceremony. Pulling the record out the record, placing it on the turntable. Using a Disc Washer and a Dust Bug setup. listening to the album, reading the lyrics, liner notes and checking out the artwork of the jacket and sometimes the record sleeve. Those things presented the full artistic experience.
Agreed. It's like smoking a pipe, vs. smoking a cigarette. The former is a ritual, with skills to be learned and apparatus to be used. The latter is just a flitting experience.
Nah I would never put any fluid cleaner on a disc , you will ruin it. Carbon fibre brush only.
@@factorylad5071 haha, what a silly way of thinking! homemade solutions can work wonders
I just don’t understand the people who could possibly give this a thumbs down. I simply don’t. You have obviously never owned nor formed a relationship with music through a record shop. And!.. vinyl is doing very well as it is by far the best selling physical medium for music. You can buy it from Walmart and drug stores! (Buy from smaller shops as they are the true vanguards.) Regardless, this is all about the beauty of vinyl, record stores, and how much better music is when you buy it from a brick and mortar record shop. It’s the best. I could have a long, passionate conversation with absolutely everyone in this mini documentary because we all belong to the same sub culture & community.
I wish new vinyl prices were the same as CDs! But i'll go broke anyway lol
True
"It's just knowing it's there. That's the most important thing."
Amen.
I love turning people onto bands they've never heard before and them loving it and wanting it
Thanks for putting this on. As the former owner of Blasters in Kissimmee, FL, I applaud any one that has owned or supported any independent Record Store from Providence RI to South Beach Miami. And much respect to the Winter Music Conference for also keeping vinyl alive. Peace.
If i ever ended up walking into one of those record stores i would end up broke, i just can't help myself with vinyl, its so beautiful.
Steve X
They are pretty and shiny
Truth!!!
I grew up with vinyl in the early 80s and just started getting back into it. It's feels so much more special to listen to a record than listening to music digitally. Something about a vinyl that I just love so much.
Vinyl will never die !
but it will melt.... lol
Don't I know it, when I was a kid I kept my records on my bedroom windowsill, until one particularly hot summer when I found they all changed shape, lol, lesson learned.
i hope
HOPKIRK : Thanksfully i hope so and all analog tech together :-)
I feel very fortunate to have experienced the fun of going into independent record stores and finding some gems I was looking for and also the surprises that awaited.
My favourite record store employee is a Jedi knight, a mentor, and a best friend. I couldn’t imagine music without him.
Yes, @ 17:50 . The Kinks Muswell Hillbillies. First reissue I bought when I got back into vinyl a few years ago. What a brilliant record.
I used to play my parents records all the time so they bought me my own record player when I was 9 years old, I guess so I would live their stereo alone, this was in 1968. I went out and purchased my first record that day, Vladimir Horowitz Rachmaninoff Piano Concerto No.2, that started my collection, never cared for CD’s, only to play them in the car maybe. Today my collection has grown to over 15 thousand albums; it includes all genres, from classical to jazz, rock, vintage Cuban orchestras from the 1930’s, 40’s & 50’s to Big Band and beyond on 33, 45 and rare 78's. I still have my first record. I’ll never change my records for anything other format.
What has drawn me towards vinyls is Christmas, that old school, small town christmas feel! Yet to buy my first Record Player
I used to work in 2 record shops back in the 80’s and it was a dream job!!!!
Sometimes I become sentimental when I look back in time, seeing older movies, seeing old documentaries and so on. In this case not, we have 2020 and all this changed. Vinyl is back and when you look back 8 years you see how good this is.
I bought a few Dolly Parton Vinyls a few months ago and now I am hooked!
I'm 14, I started a vinyl collection about a year ago, and my first record that I got was Queen's the Game. I have maybe 20 records now and some of the records shown in the documentary, I own. Like the first American Beatles album, the Rolling Stones album with the zipper, and London Calling by the clash.
What are you up to now Fletch
I lost about 20 records that I lost in a house fire,in 1993. I started my search,to replace the albums that I lost. I stopped counting at 1000,and that was quite awhile ago....... I own a lot of cassettes,and cd's......... but vinyl albums,is where it's at for me.
"weird guy from sweden" WHY THEY CALLIN ME OUT LIKE THAT!??
Nothing can ever replace that awesome feeling of flipping through stacks & boxes & piles of records...The smell of the vinyl. That feeling you get when your flipping through & spot that 1 record you have been looking for. 🙌📻🎶
I love vinyl. I can remember as a kid I grew up listening to my parents record collections. My mum's was stuff like Isley Brothers, Charlie Rich, Shadows, and my dad's was Elvis Presley. My dad got me into Elvis in a big way and I'm now a big Elvis fan. Cd's are good but once you've popped a disc into the player and press play, that's it really. With vinyl there's just something about taking a record out of the sleeve, placing it on the turntable and hearing that click as the needle goes into the groove. And after about 20 minutes you get up and flip the record over, but that adds to the fun of playing records. You just don't get that with CDs. Long live vinyl.
Going on 7 years later and it's getting bigger. People are getting sick of digital copies' problems.
a visit to a "real" record store is always a treat.you can get lost in the records for hours and the whole time someone is asking to hear an album that you've never heard and you become educated to a whole different type of music you never had in your music world.you buy that LP and now your enjoying a new experience.so then you go back to look for more of that artist/music type and then someone is sampling another LP you just can't live w/o.It's insane,I love it!
Before the internet killed the art of record hunting I used to visit America from the UK. I would pick a city get a transit pass and a map on which I would mark the record shops then trawl through them all. Chicago was the best! I mean cheap and loads of variety. Last time I went was about 1995 I think. Happy days.
I'm a 90s kid. I loved going to the music store. Used to have such a great CD collection, sadly I sold off over half of it over the years. Still have close to 200. Just put together a new stereo together this year and got my first turntable. Now that you can convert vinyl to mp3s I started collecting vinyl. Just got about 300 hand me down albums so I'm well on my way to having a nice collection. I really do wish there were more stores around but I live in the rurals so only thing I got is wall Mart. Still every grocery shopping day I stop and look through the vinyl.
the first three records i bought were John Coltrane's "Giant Steps" and "Blue Train", and Chet Baker's "Chet Baker Plays and Sings".
i love the feeling when your searching through a bunch of records and you find that one record you were not expecting to find and your just like oh shit i gotta have this.
First album is the American version of High Voltage by AC/DC, but I bought it on CD. First album on vinyl was Band of Gypsies by Jimi Hendrix.
I inherited my fathers record collection and it kick started everything for me. Spent several days going through the collection, cleaning and re-sleeving 100's of records. I was hooked. My happiest moments are discovering records stores and going in to find my next grail album.
My first record I bought was toys in the attic. I was 7. I still have it and listen to it! I love vinyl. And to the owner of Deadwax. I got a record from you and thanks for the sticker!!
The first vinyl that i evr bought or received was just two years ago. I always was intrigued to listen to vinyls and the turntable that we had has been broken for more than 10 years so my parents bougth me and my brothers a turntable and they gave me my first record which was the Minor Threat LP.
that's a great album!
I have a HUGE vinyl collection...Buying them since I was a teenager in the 70s...one time I bought a CD of a record I already had so that I could play it in my car...but it sounded flat...I was gravely disappointed...so I recorded my vinyl record to a CD...it was better, but still didn't have all the ups and downs that the vinyl did...
This is 2020, and I am glad to say that Vinyls are back!
Fine video to watch!!! I have many albums from the 70s. I miss that time of good music.
Greetings from Holland!
It’s mental how records are coming back
Seems like everyday its picking up more and more. I just hope the new generation sticks with it and doesn't treat it as a fad.
Second Hand Tunes, Val’s Halla, Dr. Wax (Hyde Park) JR’s, Jimmy’s (87th Ashland) all got a lot of my money!!! I still love going to physical stores...you can stumble upon some real gems.
First record I bought was when I was 14 in 2008, it was Rumours by Fleetwood Mac for 1$
michael carrigan Go and try to buy the same record today, it will cost you 40 bucks for new one.
how can it be 1$ in 2008, that's recently
@@tranhoanghieu4576 surely not new
michael carrigan
I bought that in 1977 release day
Timeless record
Michail Zorné it's £15.99 everywhere I've looked
This was a blast to watch! I'm a Chicago record store supporter. Something I truly love is the willingness to help a customer, whether the store gets the sale or not. I stopped into Logan Hardware in search of an album, and they searched their database to find out that Dusty Groove on Ashland had a copy. I called Dusty Groove to verify, asked for a few more titles, and they were bagged up and ready for me when I walked in.
There's no substitute for a well run local recordstore with high quality, knowledge and customer service.
The last comment says it all..."It's just knowing it's there...it's the most important thing". I cherish my 5000 LP collection, which I started collecting about 1968....and it grew to about 20,000 at one point...sold a lot of it on Ebay, which I do regret at times, but at the same time, I know those records went to good homes, and I know someone is still enjoying them. And, I still have enough LPs to listen to!!! CDs and MP3s are okay for the car or computer, but like it's said in this film, "There's just something about putting on a Vinyl LP and listening to it, flipping it over after 20 minutes, and just enjoying the warmth and sound of the music." Just not too much that's better than that!! I always hope there will be records stores to go to!!
DamGreek
I was up there too
About 10,000
Let them all go, big mistake
20,000? Good god! How long did it take you to amass that amount? Buying 500 records a year would take 40 years! I'm curious.
@@ralex3697 No it's not. 10,000 or 20,000 is just too many.
Awesome documentary I really miss going to a record store and holding an lp and speaking to the owner or employees I hope they do make a comeback.
In 2020 albums reached the highest sales albums have ever achieved
First records I bought were the red singles album by The Beatles and More Hot Rocks by The Rolling Stones. Didn't even own a record player till about a year later but I would just read the covers and like the feel of the vinyl. Two years later now and I've recently hit 200 records in my collection!
The current prices aren't "bad", compared to the madness of the late 90s/early 00s. CDs were easily 25 and going up to 40. And even at that point, despite being touted initially as being incredibly long lived as archival storage, people were already noticing the foil breaking down and the CD itself becoming worn from use. Vinyl is still a better archival format which is why I have a small collection from my favourite bands.
What/where were you buying?!? I was in high school at the time & buying tons of music. I remember average cds being USD $16-18, more expensive ones ~20. Cheaper ones 12. Used 4-10. I can't recall ever paying >25 for a single CD. LPs could be $16-18 but I remember most being $12. 7"s were almost always $4 new.
Ignoring inflation, I don't think the price of cds has changed much at all. Records however have become a niche special collector commodity & the price has jumped up significantly. The industry knew not as many people would buy but if they made tangible music feel more special (vinyl, box sets etc) they could charge more to a smaller niche crowd.
How do CDs become "worn" from use? Nothing touches the CD...you do know that right? I have hundreds of CDs, many are from the early 90s,never have i had one "wear" out or had "the foil" break down. I have never had one skip or not play.
@@sharonsmith2771 lucky you. Good job on taking care of them. But plenty of.people have had this experience with CDs. It was a common thing.
@@Jay_Kayy you didnt answer my question though, how do CDs become worn from use? There is no stylus to wear out the CD,so please explain. I just realised you didnt make the original comment. I was actually asking "volatile Sky" who did not respond.
I dont have a single cd that survived. The material that cds are made of wears out over time. Its called disc rot.
The first record I bought (actually my Grandma gave me the money to buy it)
was when I was a 2nd grader in 1985, it was "The TV Theme Song Sing-Along Album", purchased at the local K-Mart. I still have it to this day...
I grew up in the 1960s - 1970s, so in my early years of course records were The medium for music.
I never gave up on them, never got rid of them, and I still buy them at estate sales and thrift stores to get odd stuff on the cheap.
But --- CDs beat the hell out of records for sound quality, and I will buy material on them preferentially.
The experience of flipping through the bins at stores is a priceless part of life,
and is much missed in these days when there aren't so many stores to visit.
Awesome Doc
Long Live Vinyl
the first lp for me was merely by accident, because that day i did not have enough money " like many teens" for a cd, but then i stumbled upon the allman brothers band idle wild south. i thought it was cool and wallah i began collecting and developing a deep sense of appreciation for the art and format of the vinyl LP, and now just a couple years later i have thousands of records. It's addictive.
My first LP was “The Monkees Headquarters on Colgems Records in 1967. My mother got me my first record player that year with Frontier trading stamp she collected from the grocery store. That started a lifetime hobby of buying records, then 8 track and cassette tapes and compact discs. The past three years I bought a turntable and stated record collecting again. Like others I sold my original record collection when I lost interest in records and bought CD’s. I sure wish I hadn’t sold my records because I had a collection that could never be replaced.
Great documentary on LPs.
I always visit my local record stores with my coffee and immerse myself. When I go I usually do my hw or know what I want to purchase. Sometimes I just go in because my passion is music and I want to see the physical artwork.
Unfortunately the new generation was instant gratification and cannot fathom the idea of something physically created by a human being. I mean it must be so hard to physically move ones ass to change a LP much less putting in a CD.
Record stores should be put in a historical protective act. by the time i'm 30 in 15 years most of these places will sadly die and i love my records the music you can't explain to someone who uses mp3s.
Records are like works of art and some people collect them for the artwork on the covers as much as for the music and part of the appeal is also the tactile aspect of owning them. It's so good to see young folk getting into it for the first time. That's what'll keep it going.
Rhythm nation records, Doncaster, England RIP. Spent every Saturday in there between 1999 & 2003
I'd love to work in a record store.
Hell, i'd love to open one.
My dream is open a record store with a radio station combined! One day hopefully
Go man go! We need REAL record stores real bad!
I would love my own record store.
My first record was SLAYER REIGN IN BLOOD!
Slayyyerrr
I still gotta get that one
You know
The guy with the guitar looks like the classic definition of a modern hipster!
Much respect to all the shops that held on and are thriving in 2021.
Used to go listen after work...miss that little store
I was born in December of 1979 and I remember my mother's nice Pioneer turntable and loud expensive sound system and she even had one of those wood finished light organs. I as a kid had a little Fisher Price record player and I remember my older cousin Mark letting me listen to Thriller when I was a kid and he'd come stay over. Cassettes are more what I remember buying my music on because I could take them with me and a little yellow walkman to listen to at school or ride my bike. I tried getting into CDs but oh man those portable players would skip like crazy if you even walked quickly. I'm getting back into vinyl now, however it's such an expensive hobby that it's not easy for the working class. I remember days of basically records being give away at local yard sales, now you can't find a one. It's unfair because a lot of upper middle class to rich hipster types living with having a silver spoon are making the joy of vinyl unattainable to regular folks. I mean look at Adele's new album it's $39 on vinyl and same with a lot of others. There's no local mom and pop record stores near me in rural isolated southwestern VA and so Walmart is pretty much it for vinyl and even they're outrageously priced. I just hope the resurgence of even the cheap suitcase players brings this hobby down in price so it can be enjoyed by everyone. I don't need a rare ultra expensive record on vinyl, I'd just like to have some of the stuff I enjoyed in the 80s and had on cassette in my vinyl collection. I love and always have loved since middle school Depeche Mode, but their vinyl's are out of reach for me as far as price. I'm just happy to have a Jeff Buckley, the Footloose Soundtrack and two Nirvana records. Probably the most expensive two I've got are A Perfect Circle Thirteenth Step and Rammstein's newest vinyl with the matchstick and the only reason I have the second is it was a gift someone got me because I couldn't justify paying $40+ for a record.
Great Documentary!
It's coming back in my era 21 century ❤️🤘🤘🤘
I picked up 3 45's " Time Of The Season " , " Spill The Wine " & "Long Cool Woman In A Black 👗 " For a kid , I had good taste ! Wish I had picked up Big 🌟 as a cutout !
Ratt -Invasion of your privacy. 1985. My first LP. Still on the shelf with exactly 999 others.
Reeeecords - I love them for 40 years!
"Anything truly good in life requires some effort." That quote is by me. It's what I've come up with to help explain to those who can't understand why people still listen to vinyl or CDs or tapes. The physical music format is a big part of the listening experience. I do have Spotify premium and I use it as a means of listening to new artists and if I like what I hear, I track down a means to purchase a physical copy. So the effort I speak of is, finding that artist online, purchasing the physical copy, and playing it through your stereo. Even just playing it on your stereo is a ritual in itself. And it's enjoyable as hell.
In An Aeroplane Over the Sea was the first record I bought. No regrets.
it is so cool to see young and middle age pepole getting on so well!
I still like going to the independent record store. I have bought off of ebay but I prefer to be able to check on the condition myself and interacting with employees
first 2 albums I bought from Woolworths was "Meet the Beatles" and "Beatles For Sale" when I was 10 yrs old from selling newspapers in Brooklyn circa 1965..the next day I shoplifted another album.the "Dave Clark five" ... basically I shoplifted a bunch. still got them.
Terry Jacks Seasons in the sun and have no idea how old I was.I am 54 now and was a kid then. My parents had records and I played mine on their record player. I now have all their records plus about 1000 more..
Hipsters or not, record stores will always be around because once you form a relationship with vinyl through a record shop, you will always be back.
My first record was Johnny Cash on a Sun label record. I bought it because of the song-I Walk the Line. Still have that record :)
Great documentary I owned Blue Note Records in North Miami Beach for 25 years and can totally relate. Long live the indi record shops. My first 45 was Jerry Lee Lewis "High school Confidential" and the 1st LP was Bob Dylan/Bob Dylan..
really nice documentary, I buy vinyl & cd by internet (amazon, ebay, distros) but the experience of being on a Record Store, mainly the small and specialized record stores , the talk, the search, has no fuckin´ price, I buy records since 1986 and I can still remember all my afternoons saturday in No Limits Records, listening and listening music and bands, just to buy one vinyl or cassette. Ten years ago I opened my own record store "Undeground and Below" pure Metal, were a couple of the Best years of my life. Thanks for so many to the music, the physical format, the passion. Long life to vinyl ! :)
Vinyl for the audiophiles that love nostalgia.
Herb Alpert is a Freakkin' Legend. I try to get every TB Album he made....
my favorite Herb Alpert song is ' Wade in the water'.
I think they were more ripping on the companies trying to cash in on Herb Albert by re-releasing overpriced copies of albums you can still buy the originals of, cheap.
Absolutely fantastic brilliant
Thank u for posting it up
Peace
18:51 haha, In The Aeroplane Over The Sea was the first record I ever bought! It must've been over a decade ago at this point. A fantastic record front to back.
"It's just knowing it's there." Haha! This was great, but too short!
My first record was "Michael Jackson/thriller" back in 1984, March actually, I was 14! I spent a year and a half telling my friends I was going to buy it! So I bought it from the department store "Roses" (when they were a bigger store), went to the car while my mom continued to shop! I remember just being floored by the art work, and when I put that disc on the family turntable, aw man! I'll always remember that experience! That's why I've always been fascinated by them, even when I was playing CD'S , I pretended in my mind they were record's! Even when i streamed it later on , I played it start to finish like record's! And now I've come back home!
I'm young-ish (30 years old), so I only started collecting records about 5 years ago. After getting my first player, the first album I bought was Caro Emerald's Deleted Scenes From the Cutting Room Floor.
I just inherited a bunch of records from my parents. There are about 150 LPs and about 25 singles. My parents just had them in storage, but they knew I'd appreciate having them. Some of them were originally owned by my parents when they were younger, some of them were originally owned by my grandparents (which were eventually passed on to my parents), and some of them were originally owned by my great-grandmother (which were passed on to my grandparents and then to my parents). So there are three generations worth of records here passed on to the fourth. On many of my grandparents' and great-grandmother's records, they even wrote on the back of the jacket the exact date they bought it. It's like a family time capsule. Each one is a memory, not just of the music, but of the person who owned it. So I'm really enjoying going through them. I'm cleaning them up and recording each one. I plan to put all of the recordings on an mp3 player to give to my dad. Both my grandparents (my dad's parents) recently passed away. I want to give my dad a way to still listen to his parents' and grandparents' music. I think he'll really like that.
my first LP that I bought was America on the March, a phase 4 stereo record by London records, amazing stereo separation!
My first record was Cyndi Lauper's She's So Unusual back in 1984 ! Now I've 6 different pressings of this album !!!
Almost 17 getting a record player for christmas and records for my birth day. Cant get enough of this music. its expensive though.$20 - $50 for a new album.
find records used it's much cheaper that way
Just make sure they're in really good condition.
Waste of money but of that's your thing ...have at it
Shops like Woolworth's and in Scotland, John Menzie's (now W.H. Smith's) used to sell records as well as record stores so there were lots of shops to buy records from. John Menzie's was where I got most of mine.