
Saturday is Record Store Day across this great land of ours. I plan on celebrating by spending some cash at Plan 9 Music in Williamsburg -- and possibly some at Fantasy in Newport News and some more at Skinnies in Norfolk. I realize that these are businesses and that they don't need charity. We live in a capitalist society and it's survival of the fittest. But recent events -- including the demise of Relative Theory in Norfolk and the shocking death of Schoolkids Records in Chapel Hill, N.C. -- have made me more deeply appreciate the record store -- particularly the mom-and-pop variety.
I've learned about music in record stores. I can remember Steve Aiken, singer for a punk band called A Number of Things, recommending "Let It Be" the Replacements record, to me in Schoolkids 20-some years ago. That LP has brought me endless joy. More recently, I stumbled on a Handsome Family CD in Relative Theory and picked it up partly based on a sassy Post-It note attached to the disc. Now, the Handsome Family are one of my favorite bands -- right along with The Replacements.
But I've also made friends in record stores. One afternoon about 10 years ago, my pal and fellow Ramones fanatic Johnny Coe and I cemented our friendship with a conversation at The Band Box in Williamsburg -- another shop that's gone.
I guess the world won't stop turning if record stores go the way of the wooly mammoth. But a piece of community will be gone and I'm not sure that 10,000 MP3 blogs will be able to fill the void.
So ... Let's go shopping!
Volume CDS in virginia beach just closed for a good a week ago. RIP
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