Site Links

Reason to Buy a Turntable

Posted Fri Dec 21, 2007, 4:44 PM ET

As I promised myself, I stopped by Record Mart yesterday evening. With a prime location near the 42nd Street Shuttle and the stairs to the uptown 1/2/3 line, the place was jumping. There's no way to miss it. Music and light pour from its little corner of the underground. Busking musicians stationed just beyond Record Mart's entrance couldn't compete with the music blaring from inside the store. And people came with smiles and wide eyes.

"Vinyl!" one woman shouted as she stepped inside.

"Yup," I said. "Isn't it great?"

"Yes. I didn't even know people were still making vinyl!"

"There's actually a bit of a vinyl resurgence going on."

"Is that right? Too bad I sold my entire collection—around 10,000 LPs—about ten years ago."

"Oh no. That's such a sad story."

Her eyes darted around the room. "I know," she said.

The place pulsed with excitement. Ironically, most of the store is dedicated to MP3 player ancillaries—earbuds, docking stations, protective covers—but it was the music—and, specifically, the vinyl—that was drawing all the attention. People flipped through the titles eagerly, passionately. There wasn't much—one wall that welcomes you as you walk in and a small shelf around the corner to the left—but what was there was excellent: Candido, Arsenio Rodriguez & the Afro-Cuban Sound, Cortijo & His Time Machine, The Lebron Brothers, Willie Colon, Eddie Palmieri...!

I collected one after another while my companion—fervent, impatient, agitated—watched.

"Are you buying those?" she asked.

"Yes," I smiled.

She sighed: "Now I have to go buy a new turntable."

Permalink  ::  Blog Home

Previous Post | Next Post >

Reader Comments 

Posted Mon Dec31, 2007, 2:51 PM — By Mike Kelly

There is certainly nothing like fresh wax....the smell of fresh acetate, the crisp paper liners, the in-depth liner notes and cover art gives the listener an entire physical sensory experience to compliment the audio. In fact, I love records so much, I haven't been able to look at Ebay for three years for fear I'll go nuts on original pressings. I was spoiled as a kid growing up in St. Louis with Vintage Vinyl....one of the true meccas for vinyl in the midwest. Fortunately for us in the Bay Area, we have still have some great vinyl outlets such as Amoebas, Rasputins, Streetlight Records, and a ton of small specialty shops catering to specific genres. Stephen..If you have a minute, please send me an email, as I'd love to invite you to a demo of some new speakers & cables at CES. Thanks, Mike Kelly Michael@nadephelan.com 831-440-2403

Posted Fri Jan 4, 2008, 1:39 PM — By Oliver Amnuayphol

I gotta say I feel pretty blessed: we here in Portland have some pretty cool places to get our licorice pizza fix. When I first got into hi-fi 15 years ago, it seemed everyone was writing off vinyl; now, I and almost everyone I work with (mostly young 'uns, circa 30's) love to spin the black circle. Resurgence--amen brother, amen!

Add Comment

Name (Required):

Email (Required, will not be shown to public):

Comment (Required, max chars: 1024):

You have characters left.

Type the characters you see in this picture

  

Sponsored Technology Center

Credit Card Bill me later
Please send me special offers and exclusive promotions from Stereophile's premiere partners.

Stereophile    ::     Home Theater    ::     Ultimate AV    ::     Home Theater Design    ::     Shutterbug    ::     Home Entertainment Show
Home/News • Subscribe • Give a Gift • Sub Services • Digital Subscription
Recordings • Back Issues • Buyer's Guide • Print & Web Media Kit • Privacy • Terms of Use • Contact
RSS News & Reviews • RSS Blogs

Copyright © SOURCE INTERLINK MEDIA All rights reserved.