Elton John Visits Tower Records on Sunset (1970's), Unaired Footage, Remastered by SabuCat
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 4 фев 2025
- This rare and never-seen-before footage features Elton John visiting Tower Records in West Hollywood in the '70s.
Tower Records was a hub for music lovers, especially in the '70s and '80s, and artists, including Elton John, would sometimes stop by for promotional events, signings, or just to check out new releases.
This high-quality film restoration was proudly remastered by SabuCat Productions / Jeff Joseph and made exclusively available on the SabuCat channel.
SabuCat Productions, a premier stock footage house for over 20 years, now restores and shares rare and high-quality moving images on RUclips. Known for its massive collection of over 50,000 coming attraction trailers, SabuCat also produced all three "3-D Expos" at Hollywood's Egyptian Theatre. We're currently collaborating with UCLA and the Library of Congress to restore the Laurel & Hardy/Hal Roach library for theatrical and home video releases. Contact us for documentary footage rates!
MORE FROM SABUCAT:
•UCLA Library, Laurel and Hardy Film Preservation Fund: www.cinema.ucl....
•A Thousand Cuts: The Bizarre Underground World of Collectors and Dealers Who Saved the Movie Co-Authored by Jeff Joseph (SabuCat): a.co/d/3Efg9Rl - Кино
I was working at Tower on that day. Elton used to come in often whenever he was in town. I remember this being early Tuesday morning between 7-8am before the store opened. The people in this video were not the regular public and were part of his entourage (publicist, road manager, security, camera crew and his limo driver who at times served as his assistant). This footage was part of a documentary that was being filmed. I was responsible for inventory and cataloguing everything we sold. Elton knew our store inside and out and could find whatever he was looking for without help. At times he would ask me if we had a certain album in stock that was not displayed or would have me order it.
If I remember correctly this was about May or June of 1975 I think. Captain Fantastic had just recently come out and it sold out in our store within a matter of hours. We had plenty on order which arrived days before and we displayed it near the front of the store knowing he was coming in the next day. He was very low key and friendly and would autograph anything we asked. At around the 2:27 and 4:11, 4:38 mark I can be seen walking in the background wearing an orange shirt.
I remember going into the store a few times and seeing the many bootleg albums and thinking are they legal to sell . Did Elton ever express any opinion of your store selling bootleg albums which recording artists like him do not receive a dime in royalty money ? Neil Young is on record not liking this practice of selling these albums in record stores.
mr Kotter spotted at 2:26
What about the glory hole in the back where he ate too much for lunch and had to have his stomach pumped?
Wow, it's fascinating to see you in the video and then here commenting on youtube all these decades later! Must have been a pretty interesting job to work at Tower.
Another illusion shattered. Oh well, at least Neil Young walked in and out by himself.
Remember as a teenager going into record shop flicking through vinyl albums. Had to save up to buy a record and when you finally got it, it was a treasured possession. I got Captain Fantastic as my main Christmas present and was ecstatic. Played it to death. Different world.
Yellow Brick Road was my main present one year.
Fun fact- Elton John will buy EVERYTHING new when it came out back in the day from pop to funk to metal to country and he would have all his houses filled with the same record collection.
The man loves his music .
He would also make sure he would have the LP, Cassette, and 8trk of each title purchased.
though its strange he didnt just give a list for someone else to get for him.
@@purefoldnz3070It appears Elton John enjoys shopping for records and had time to do it. You usually order your personal assistant to run errands if you're busy or don't want to do it.
@@purefoldnz3070 probably something he enjoyed doing himself I suppose
@@geldofpunk32 yeah and interestingly enough he sold that record collection in 1991, something he later regretted.
This brings back some memories. In 1992, I lived in Atlanta. One weekday, I went to Tower Records at Lenox Mall in Buckhead. As I was walking from the parking lot I noticed a black limo parked out front. I walked into Tower Records and there stood Elton John across the room, thumbing through the CDs. There wasn't another soul in the place except for him, the employee, and me. I walked up to the employee at the cash register and asked him if he had a Sharpie pen. He handed me one and I walked over to the Elton John section and pulled out "Madman Across the Water" and walked over to him and introduced myself and said, "I've been a huge fan of yours since the 70s and can't believe you're in here," to which he replied in his British accent, "I come in here quite often, actually." He signed his CD "XXXs and OOOs, Elton"!
@@jackj5368 , Elton lived in Atlanta for decades. Do your homework.
i wonder whats on Elton's List ? we don't have any good record shops left in England ( like this one ) if we did perhaps Elton John woould visit in London 👏👏 🙋♀️ xx
@@jackj5368 Cheaper than L.A., nice weather, and it's out-of-way, he's not going to be mobbed by people when he goes out and about.
Lies
I grew up in LA and I sure miss Tower Records on Sunset. It was a landmark for so many of us. I remember meeting Ritchie Blackmore in the store one day. Those were the days, my friend. We thought they'd never end.
This made me cry, just seeing the inside of that store again. There's nothing like shopping in such an enormous, well-stocked store -- and when I lived in LA I spent many, many hours combing the bins. I still visit it in my dreams regularly. It was like going to the library, reading the record jackets and one thing sparking an idea that would lead you to investigate another... I don't think I ever got out of there in less than an hour -- and two or three hours of intensive browsing and pre-checkout cost-estimating was not uncommon...
Was it a chain? I live near Chicago and even though I was buying 45s at the tail-end of their existence around 1981 and albums in the first half of the '80s, I don't remember that store. We had Peaches. 😂
@@lemurianchick We had Tower and Peaches in Seattle -- though maybe not at the same time. I felt like the Tower on Sunset was my second home when I lived in LA.
There’s Amoeba Records in Hollywood now, and in some ways it’s just as good. Lots of pristine used vintage records (I’ve found DJ copies of old albums there for $5.00 that were obviously never played). So in a way, this sort of classic record store (which yes, I still miss desperately) is still there. Next time in Hollywood, go check it out. If you do, I’d love to hear what you guys think!
They have new reprints of classic stuff, but the new vinyl is too expensive to buy like Elton here.
Just think back to this era of music. Every week there'd be a great new song on the radio. They just kept coming and coming.
Actual music.
@@johnsmith-ug5tp Indeed.
Tower Records on Sunset is long gone, but it was, is and always will be, the most iconic record store in music history. You could walk in and see Elton or any legend.
Is it gone? I didn't know that. I haven't been down there for about ten years. The last time I drove by it was still open. They had a great selection of hard-to-find records and imports. I think that was where I picked up a few Beatle Bootleg CD's as well.
@@mysterymac38 It's been gone 17 years now.
@@tracedog27 17 years? wow, time sure goes by fast when you get old. Is there another store there now or is it a vacant building? I guess one of these days I will need to drive back down there and see how much has changed. I live about 80 miles away.
Before 1971 the most iconic record store in LA was Wallichs Music City at Sunset and Vine.
Seriously , till when ? The world was also a different place then too
Elton John will always be my favorite artist! When I go out and sing karaoke, he's the one artist I sing the most songs from.
Elton doing his homework while he was at the top of his game in 1975. Staying ahead of the competition? What an incredible historical artifact this video is. A snapshot of yesteryear that could very well be today in many respects
I've been to that (former) location.
Curious what you mean? In what respect 'today?'
I was a HUGE HUGE Elton John fan, still am. 1975 was Eltons golden year! He was at his peak. To see him buying records, also my fave thing to do, IN 1975!!! To see tons of his lp at special price 3.99!! To see one of the best stocked records stores of the 70s FILLED with current lps...MAN THAT WAS AWESOME!!
THANKS so much for posting this!!!!
"Philadelphia Freedom," "Someone Saved My Life Tonight", "Island Girl" and "Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds".
I agree. Elton was on top of the world in summer ‘75. “Tommy” had just come out in theatres, too. “Captain Fantastic” was his last great album, in my opinion. I could never understand why he dismissed Dee and Nigel.
@@caryheuchert I forget "Pinball Wizard"
@@caryheuchert Who were Dee n Nigel please?
@@chairlesnicol672 Bassist, Dee Murray & Drummer, Nigel Olsson
In 1975 I was superglued to the record player and Captain Fantastic. That LP was part of my soul, I memorized every note and word. As a drummer in high school, Nigel Olsson was my idol and his work on CF blew my mind. To this day CF is in my top 5 records.
that was my first album I ever bought. I wore it out! the artwork on the cover is great too. I was 11 in 1975....good times.
Great album&album cover also! Nice artistry!👍
In 2022 Elton is still listening to current music releases - hard to believe he has the time since he is always so busy - a genius he is - we all know the hits but some of his "album tracks" amaze me -- MONA LISA AND MAD HATTERS - imagine how Bernie gives Elton this brilliant lyric and Elton creates a brilliant melody that becomes a brilliant recording - I am in awe of their talent!
Absolutely agree. Bernie and EJ are legends as individuals and also as a partnership.
He also is very up to date and in depth knowledgeable about football, often evidencing in interviews and discussions that he finds time to at the very least watch highlights if not the games themselves.
Between intense touring, mentoring, lobbying for younger artists (some of whom he manages) as well as his AIDS charity and his most important job - Daddy - I don't know how he does it. And yet there's time to study and collect photography too. Money can only buy so much time
Excellent example, Justin. This guy worked hard, talent notwithstanding.
Just give me one hour in a 1970's Tower Records.....
I'd want to be in a record store in 1968 when they were getting rid of all their mono stock.
@@ChromeDestiny I'd rather be in a record store that stocked original Veritgo label records. I doubt many US shops had those as imports. Oh, and a "for export" Parlophone label pressing of The Beatles (White album)
Or one hour in a 1970s record store anywhere.
You just have to love the art work on the covers of the albums.
@@ChromeDestiny Yes I really bulked up my collection with the Great Mono Clearout!
He remembers when rock was young.
i don't think that was suzy he was with.
@@bsquared4604 Probably Stu...
Him and Suzy were holding hands and skipping stones and he had an old gold Chevy and a place of his own.
🤣🤣🤣
@@bsquared4604then it's back to base to lb more rumple!!
I loved that store! Miss it so much. Elton is meticulously buying every record on that list of his. Now you’d just bring it up on streaming crap. But hey! We had dedication back then. Fun video, thanks!!!
I miss the days being a kid and riding my bicycle to the record store for the latest vinyl release....riding back home with great care and running to my bedroom to place the needle down and stare at the album cover reading every last word on the inside and out!!
I grew up in Allentown, PA in the 70's and there was this record store downton called Speedy's. It was about 2 miles from my house and of course as a 15, 16 or 17 year old you can walk forever. On weekends friends and I would walk to the store, that was a highlight and with our allowance or is we worked part-time, our own money we would purchase the newest album. Speedy's was a teens dream come true. I would buy lots of Motown esp the J5, but I was also a big Elton john fan and I couldn't wait to purchase the Yellow Brick Road or Captain Fantastic album when that came out. Kids now just order everything online, but I would not trade my experience and adventure of walking with friends to the record store, and having so much fun together and after that maybe McDonalds for like a .60 cent quarter-pounder burger and shake, hehehe
Fantastic! Would love to see any more Elton videos you share
For me, as someone who was born in ‘76, it’s neat to see pristine new copies of albums covers from that era. I’m used to seeing albums from that era with worn covers.
Record Album covers were entertaining to browse through .. an era gone.
Oh what I would do to go back to 1975 again. As a teenager it was such fun going to record stores and spending hours flipping through. Hopefully coming out with 1 or 2 new records. Fantastic time to be alive back then. Today, social media will be the destruction of our society.
The record store in my town would buy used records and sell them for One to Two dollars depending on condition. I picked up a lot of great albums there. My friend and I would always be looking for the Beatle rainbow labels and hoping a rare yesterday and today/butcher album would show up.
Don’t forget all the bootlegs that started showing up in some record shops. It was a task just to keep up with everything that was coming out.
The summer of 75, sigh.....
I found this so interesting to watch - fascinating and actually somewhat emotional, remembering those amazing days of wonderful music....
Elton not only listened to his competition, he learned from it.
WHOA - True
At this time I was nine years old and just finishing up third grade I lived in Decatur Georgia and I really didn't catch on to Elton fully until around 83 but I just remember this time period when the world was a much happier place !!
This is treasure, immence, a legend picking up legends, i don't think it gets better than that.
Great video. I remember seeing him in Tower Records Atlanta
There's another video of Neil Young in a record store back in the 70s, and he finds bootlegs of his own and goes off on the record store owner. Great video.
The clerk is awesome 👌 .. " I only buy 8 Tracks .. "
@@davidellis5141 No man, the clerk is an unhelpful childish dude........'i don't know man, my boss buys the records....i don't listen to this'.......but i guess that hasn't changed........kids behind the counter nowadays attitudes are just like that
Always a miserable curmudgeon just like the insufferable prick don henley. The guy never smiles.
Love those prices ($4.66, $2.22). Those prices were right within my budget. I miss those old 70s record shops.
I was buying LPs in 1983 for 3.99. They weren't new releases, but they were recent, like The English Beat. Now, shit, ya can't buy a record for less than 25 bucks.
The prices look low, but $4.66 in 1975 is around $27 in 2024!
@@prairiedogsareextantYou can if you know where to look. I just bought a sealed copy of a 12” LP that was released only 4 years ago, for 12 bucks. That’s not unusual either, unless you only buy records at the local record stores. Discogs and eBay are your friends.
@@litemakr Yeah, I don't know why so many people don't understand that when you see a price from decades ago, it wasn't seen as "cheap" at the time, as that amount had more spending power due to the fact that wages were lower, too. You always have to adjust for inflation. $5 bucks in 1976 was the equivalent of $27 today and it was seen that way. Or to put it another way, paying $5 bucks for a record in 1976 "felt" like what it would be to spend about $25 on a record today. You can't look at prices from that long ago and view them through today's lens because the minimum wage in 1976 was only $2.30. So buying an album meant working over half of your morning at work. The price wasn't "cheap" and it wasn't "expensive", it was just normal, really. Most people earn around $10 - $15 an hour in their states at a minimum wage job today, so the price of an album today, which is around $25 - $27 - is *exactly* the same, relatively speaking, as in 1976, because you'd work 2 hours at your job for that much, basically. The *federal* minimum wage is still only $7.50, but most states have ignored that and unless someone is working for a total prick, nobody pays that low anymore. Anyway, I see so many people who don't understand this for some reason. You don't go back to 1920 and say, "Sandwiches were only nickel, it was so cheap," etc. Doesn't work that way.
Imagine a supermarket. Except its full of records. Aisle after aisle. Yes kids, thats how huge records were.
How I'd just love to go back in time, just to browse around that record store... oh and to bump into Elton too !
Saw Robert Fripp play guitar (Frippertronics) at Tower records a few years after this. Astounding record store unlike any other back then.
It's better when you could only afford 1 or 2 records a week. When you buy so many records it becomes difficult to process them properly. A problem most of us are facing this age of streaming.
Agree 100%
Very good point. He wouldn't have had the time to properly listen to them, when he's got so many to choose from.
Perfectly said
I had a paper route back then and would usually buy one record a week. Unless I needed clothes for school or had a date. I was 14 in 1975 and made about $10 a week.
Or 1 or 2 a year in my case 🤭
Elton John was very serious about record shopping.
9:36 Grand Funk " Bad Time" playing in the background, one of the all time greats!
summer 75!
fuck you take my like lmao
If Neil Young were there, he'd help you find the bootlegs.
He was a regular shopper, special hours were available for him to enjoy an uninterrupted experience. Ha ! 6:30 Bob Delanoy (sunglasses on his head, in the background) The Store manager, Great guy.
He was District Manager when I worked for Tower in Mid 80's !
Elton talks about visiting Tower Records in his recent autobiography. He also describes his obsessiveness I guess it were with making lists of songs and records he wanted, owned, etc. I just finished the book so seeing this per chance is fantastic. Love Elton
That era is completely gone now. I grew up actually buying music (CDs and mp3) I feel like at the very end of it. I was able to use the internet to research bands, and the other bands they played with, the performers they were inspired by, and all of that was how I grew my collection and knowledge of music. And if you buy 1 or 2 records every week or two you really dig into them. There are kids who still dig deep into who bands are, but with the streaming format it's really hard to develop that closeness from when you had to put in effort to find good music.
I got to meet Elton John and Bernie Taupin when he was signing his new cd MADE IN ENGLAND. My friend and I waited in line for two hours.. we were the last two before they shut the doors I had just bought a new suede jacket earlier that day. It just started to rain before we got into the store. OMG I was so happy my jacket did not get ruined .. as I made my way towards Elton John with my cd in hand I thanked Elton John profusely for letting us be the last two and said the most embarrassing thing to him I called him by his real name " THANK YOU SO MUCH MR WHITE FOR SIGNING MY CD" HE LOOKED AT ME WITH THIS LOOK LIKE WHO IS THIS QUEEN CALLING ME BY MY REAL NAME.. OMG I COULD HAVE DIED OF EMBARRASMENT . I QUICKLY APOLOGIZED FOR MY GAFFE HOWEVER THE DAMAGE WAS DONE BERNIE TAUPIN SITTING RIGHT NEXT TO HIM AND KINDA LAUGHED UNDER HIS BREATHE WHILE ALSO SIGNED MY CD.. OH WELL LIVE AND LEARN
At least you didn't call him Reginald, or even worse, Reggie, I can see it now, he comes out onstage and the entire stadium just starts chanting,
REGGIE! REGGIE! REGGIE!
(And it's Dwight, not White)
His real name is Elton John- he changed it by Deed Poll.
No wonder he looked at you funny. His last name is DWIGHT, not WHITE. Ooooooooooof. 🤦♀️
maybe it was because his real last name was dwight, not white.
haha You pulled a major boner! I can see Elton's eyes and facial expression without even being there. ha
I wish record stores and vinyl prices were still like this.
yeah really would be awesome.
The prices! 👍
I worked at this store in the late 80's, the security booth wasn't built yet in this video, we used to watch famous people shop from behind the two-way glass it seemed like every day, I worked as security/ parking lot attendant lots of great memories
Billboard Magazine was at 9,000 Sunset my uncle Peter Heine was director of advertising. Peter introduced me to Elton John at the Performing Artist of the Year Awards in 1974 it was in a place called the Set just just off Sunset. Elton was excellent company. He was really excited to be there and so was I.
Thank you Elton I haven't forgotten.
I love you Elton John
A musical genius and legend. - C
I walked in this store in the late 90’s and bought a couple of global underground cd’s. Crazy to see this video. It was before I was born!
He's actually doing research, he listens to the albums and he figures out who to hire, what direction to go and Idk what else. The reason I know that is because I watched an interview by James Newton Howard where he said he got a call from his manager who asked him if he wanted to tour with Elton John. James said yes he would he went to Elton's house for an interview and he said that Elton had 3 copies of his album that had not been selling and he hired him on the spot to go on tour in 4 days. You can find that interview very easily by searching on youtube. EJ did his homework !!! Also this was when James was working making only $125 a week. His story about Elton John hiring him is great...look it up.
Record stores were so cool, ultimate time passer.
What do you mean? Still Are! There's more now than there have been in many years.
I mean, it was nothing to be in there for three hours sometimes. Elton just bought more albums than I did in a year!
@@hippydippy Not quite the same
I thought you're supposed to just go there, look for your music, go home, play it. It's not like you can preview how everything sounds in the store.
@@life_so_hard_i_so_emoMost record stores have listening stations, so yes you can definitely preview your purchases.
I like how focused and quiet he was while picking out music Im the same way as well..
Those were the days! Walking into that store, getting abused by the staff, picking up the newest release, ranks up there with the greatest musical experiences (Like seeing the Stones school G n’ R at the Coliseum in ‘89!) of my life!
It was magical!
Funny you should say this. In Seattle the employees were total dicks "THAT'S NO WAY to handle a record."
However, when I visited this store in LA, CA folks were quite friendly. Guess I was there on lucky days.
Paul chambers , don cherry , Charlie Christian all visible in the jazz section at 4.42
Around 40 years ago I watched an interview with lyricist Tim Rice who said he had a standing order with a local record shop to receive every single in the week's UK top 20. This video reminds me of that. Elton would've been just as well buying the entire stock and sorting it out later.
Ahhhhh, the selection and the prices!! Oh if it could only be that way now......
I remember, as a 6 year old child, being fascinated with the Captain Fantastic album cover. There was a topless woman on the back cover and I thought i was being so naughty when I looked at it. It’s still my favorite Elton John album to this day.
Regarded by the critics as his best work, although the Yellowbrick Road double album is still my favourite.
i went in there a few times, it was truly amazing
He looks like a store manager doing inventory!
Yes, he's quite the administrator / organised.
@@markwatkins8309 Even then he took his business seriously, which is why he is super rich today!
That was his day job until ‘good buy yellow brick road’ catapulted him to stardom
The big guy looks like John Candy! When I was in like the 6th grade, someone gave me a stack of albums. The Beatles, Janis Joplin, The Rolling Stones, The Doors, Captain Fantastic and The Brown Dirt Cowboy, Edgar Winter, Alice Cooper, Rod Stewart, and on and on. Being a kid, I loved the music but had no idea what I had. Later in 1977, our house burned to the ground one day while we were in town, and we had no insurance. I never was able to get another stereo until my oldest sister gave us her old console stereo in 1979. But I only had like 2 records, David Allen Coe, and Moe Bandy and Joe Stampley.....
It always amazes me that many great artists are also big fans of other artists. Many times the great artist will be a fan of an obscure artist that the public has overlooked.
I just find this mesmerising. Here we have elton john one of the greatest song writers and performers ever casually going through records of artists who on the whole were way below his level. It's just amazing. More amazing than seeing him on stage. He looks so ordinary. Lol I have to keep nudging myself and say he's just a man he's not a god for Christ's sake. But I'm still mesmerised by seeing him in a record shop. I can't imagine my feelings if I had actually been there . I think the only thing that would top it is walking into a record shop and there is john lennon thumbing through the vinyls. I would probably faint.
This was way more interesting than I expected it to be
elton was cool as fuck during this period
Remember when I and a friend bought 1 record at a real record store and headed to mall and packed records in the bag and showed the bag with a receipt passing the counter...miss those days..my mom always asked why my collection grew, of course I borrowed those records and should return em soon.
Needless to say, the entire store was closed just for him, and he was high as hell while shopping.
We love you Elton.
If he didn't make this great career, maybe he would have ended in a record store, cataloging records.
he has said that's what he aspired to do.
I'm curious why he was doing whatever he was doing in the way of inventory unless he was keeping up with the musical Jone's or calculating sales to some degree based on some formula.
I need to build a time machine, and go back to that moment!
Why would you want to follow someone around a record store?
@@Unknown_Ooh Used to love going to record stores and leafing through the bins. Now you might find bins at flea markets,or whatever, but there used to be stores dedicated for music lovers. And why wouldn't somebody want to follow Elton John at that point in his career to see what kind of music he was in to?
I used to go to Tower with a want list and with a blank sheet which would include a list of things I would find but be unsure of.
Nice recording of the 70s.
Seeing him for the first time ever next year! Birmingham here I come!
- C 2022
This was just so great.,.. I used to do the same thing in a record store...
.I could only afford 1 album a week. But sometimes I would get 2 or 3 45's instead. It was all based on money. . The lack of it..... No gas .... This just brings back so many good feelings...music of all genres was that good and I liked everything
That's funny. Just stumbled on this clip. I forgot that Elton John was in LA in the mid 1970's. I was working at a health food store in Hollywood at the time. It was called Aunt Tilly's (at the corner of Franklin and Western if anybody can remember) I think there was a Ralphs grocery store in the same shopping center. Anyway, Elton came through the store on several occasions late at night to pick up stuff. John Lennon too. This was during the time that Yoko kicked him out to go "find himself" I guess. I later learned that Lennon was collaborating with Elton John at the time, which made sense seeing that both were in LA then. Aunt Tilly's was open till midnight. Fun times.
Early morning swoop into the record store to buy a bunch of music for the inspirational data base.
had to be either summer or fall of 1975 since Captain Fantastic was new....
..! Tuesday mornings all right for shopping haha
Saw Stevie Wonder album in this video! Elton& Stevie were top artists in mid 1970s! Great clip of happy times of record shopping in 1970s!🎵🎶🤗
Listening to music on physical media is something that can never be beat by streaming! Physical media just looks better and sounds better. I'll take quality over convenience. And it's not inconvenient to hold a disc in your hand, put it in the player, and watch it spin, and you get an experience like no other. Streaming is ok, but it should never take the place of physical media. People should always be given a choice. There will always be people who like one or the other.
Nos anos 70 e 80 fiz muito isso de entrar numa loja de discos no centro de são paulo, é muito gostoso ficar olhando LPs, a gente abria via o encarte e até cheirava o vinil, claro que eu não tinha a grana do Elton John, que podia levar 200 e até mais Lps, numa só tacada. o CD não tem o mesmo gosto de desfrutar de um LP em sua essencia.
I could see elton picked up curtis mayfields album "there's no place like america today"
Cool footage. Tower in LA has a fabled history, but in New York, where I frequented their Greenwich Village and Cooper Square locations, they were huge in size but still ultimately interchangeable with other corporate-run record stores, like Sam Goody or Strawberrys in Boston. I was more drawn to the "indie" type record stores which also sold rare, promo, out of print, and live records. Funny (and ironic) that the guy at the register is wearing a John Lennon t-shirt
Elliott Murphy at 1:31. One of the buried treasures of 1970s rock.
Imagine your record shopping and becide you is one of the biggest artist in the world
Elton bought also the King Crimson "USA" the blue live album
'how was work today honey?' 'Great. I went with Elton to Tower Records while he picked out music'. LOL
TX.
I was just thinking the same thing!!!
I have been watching hours of 70's hi-fi machines. Elton is doing his artist research probably seasonally, winter, spring summer and fall. The emense art work and design that sold all those amazing songs played back on sound systems equally incredible.
my FAV place on sunset ! memories from my stay in LA
I remember when rock was young me and suzie had so much fun
Hell, when you come in with a pre written list, you are a serious record buyer. Damn.
Ever meticulous, thank you Elton!
Wow, I miss the 45s rack at the record store. Some stores had them in cubby holes. Others had them behind the counter & you had to ask for them by number. 05:51
I thought he was cute during this time...
I have the Captain Fantastic wall mirror.
Been a huge elton fan since the very beggining. And to this day even though he's produced many superb lp my favorite even after all this years is still mad man across the water, dont get me wrong i still like his stuff but mmatw is still by far my most favorite
We were shopping there in the early 80’s, and my friend said look on the next isle, sure enough there was Stevie Wonder with 2 big body guards.
I spotted an Oscar Peterson Trio album that I bought around this same time (maybe a few years later)... I miss those days.
Very cool! Thanks
Not a cellphone in sight! Just people living life to the fullest with a absolutely zero worries or problems
People had as much worries as now. It’s just it was a bit slower pace of life -people were not inundated all the time with the internet and social media with their smart phones. But the World was as troubled with world conflicts and economy problems and addictions
70's had the (fake) gas and energy crunch. The Vietnam war was winding down, inflation was starting to go through the roof, the stock market was tanking (bottomed out around 1981), drugs and crime were vastly increasing, and the economy tanked a couple of times. You're looking into the past through rose colored glasses.
@@muziklvr7776 good comment. I was a grammar school kid in the 1970’s and people had problems such as depression, alcoholism, and life worries. I notice that the millennials and generation z people are obsessed with how good the 80’s were especially in music and popular culture. But they look it through “ rose colored glasses “. The 80’s had recessions, and global conflicts and all sorts of problems.
@@beholden1663 Alcohol was another big big problem, especially among veterans. People were smoking like crazy everywhere including hospitals, supermarkets, and movie theaters. The past was only really good to those who had large sums of money.
this is a horrible boomer comment, life was hard as well but there wasnt that EASE to access to instant information like today.
Elliot Murphy: "Hey, why have my Spotify listens gone up?"
Elton John has podcast called Elton hour listening to others music on Apple music and other podcasts
A bunch of my faves in those bins
Elton picked up a 1975 copy of King Crimson's USA at 0:48 Wow, he had a list, and he listened to everything.
Fuck it looks like abouslute heaven in there imgaine goin in there and running into him!!!!
DEATHINTHEAIR84 Was this before he was gay? Or was he looking for Island Girl? back then?
i used to work security at virgin megastore, once in a while we had a celebrity come in and shop.
I have to say Elton is our modern pop Mozart!!!