RSD 2013 Feature

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“All in all, it’s a nice PR boost for mom and pop retailers and record stores.”

Eric Jones, owner of Revolver Records / photo by Samantha Crooke

by Jessica Forbes This Saturday, April 20, two area record stores are participating in Record Store Day, an annual event becoming increasingly anticipated amongst music lovers and vinyl record enthusiasts. Locally, Music Box and Revolver Records will open their doors to customers, many who will be shopping for the various limited and early releases exclusive to participating stores. Founded in 2007, Record Store Day (RSD) is intended to draw people to locally owned, independent record stores. The event, which was created in the U.S., now has thousands of participating stores in multiple countries. Conceived by a group of record storeowners and employees, the goal of RSD’s organizers is to bring stores, musicians and customers together in celebration of music. Held annually on the third Saturday in April, the event is open only to stores that are not publicly traded, have 70 percent ownership remaining in the state in which they April 18, 2013

operate, and have an inventory that is at least 50 percent music retail. Stores must register on the RSD website in order to be vetted as independent and eligible to participate. In other words, big boxes are out, if only for one day.

THE ENDURING INDEPENDENTS

Since the 1970s, when shopping malls truly began sprouting up like weeds, independent record stores have faced competition from big box—so named for their size and shape—and corporate retailers. Since the early 2000s, brick and mortar stores of all sizes have faced competition from the Internet, where digital downloads and sites like Amazon.com have changed not only the method by which people receive music, but has also opened up a world wide market which people can access from home in their pajamas. Despite the competition, independent record stores have remained a part of musical

culture, a culture that Record Store Day strives to promote. “All in all, it’s a nice PR boost for mom and pop retailers and record stores,” said Eric Jones, owner and sole operator of Revolver Records. Michael Bunnell, the Executive Director of the Coalition of Independent Music Stores and an organizer of RSD, said that from what he’s seen over the past several years, “It appears that to a degree the great romance with digital goods has at least flattened out, and more and more people are seeking out a real musical experience and a real social experience.” Throughout changes in format preference, from record, to cassette, to CD, to MP3, “the independent music store is and has been there,” said Bunnell, who has owned and operated independent record stores for 36 years, and believes that independents “have always been where the real music fan gravitates to, and now more than ever provide a rich experience.”

“It’s a forum,” explained Jennifer McGaugh of Pensacola’s Music Box. “There’s an elongated conversation that takes place here that you don’t experience elsewhere.” Co-owner Jim Vasser agreed, “It’s not just from us, it’s from customers shopping next to them, too.”

SIGN O’ THE TIMES

Both Music Box and Revolver Records have previously participated in RSD, including last November’s Black Friday event, the second in RSD history. Vasser, who co-owns Music Box with partner McGaugh, has seen crowds and awareness grow between the store’s two previous RSD events. “It seems to be growing, kind of reflecting the national growth of vinyl as a whole,” he said, with the number of releases and shoppers “definitely reflecting those numbers, getting pretty big.” The resurgence of vinyl occurred not quite simultaneously with the rise of MP3s and iTunes, but it wasn’t far behind. 19


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