Category Archives: Blogs

Culture Clash Records, Magnet Magazine, and Indie Record Store Culture

by Joe Wallace

One of my favorite Midwestern indie record stores is the Toledo, Ohio-based Culture Clash Records. The shop is friendly, fun to browse, and I always seem to find wonderfully weird records there like the Jannik Top robodisco project Space.

On my last visit to Culture Clash, the day before HorrorHound Weekend in Cincinatti, I was chatting with people in the shop about doing an interview for the Turntabling WTF Record Guide, when I was handed a copy of Magnet Magazine.

Apparently Magnet has been off the newsstands for a while in favor of an all-digital version, but has since returned with a print edition. That is a good thing–while I’ve not followed Magnet in some time, it was nice to see them back in print.

I took the mag, browsed it piecemeal for a week and forgot about it.

But today I picked it up again after making a discovery I’d missed all the previous times I’d read the mag–I had never glanced at the back cover until today. Imagine my pleasant surprise to find Magnet has done something quite interesting and cool with their selected listing of Indie Record Stores In Your Backyard.

The list includes several shops currently on the Vinyl Road Rage Four list (which will be announced next week) and I was very pleased to see some other familiar names there, too.

Magnet was good enough to list Culture Clash, Grimey’s in Nashville, Guestroom Records in Norman Oklahoma, the wonderful Landlocked Music in Bloomington, Indiana, plus Luna Music in Indianapolis, Shake It Records in Cincinnati, Vintage Vinyl in St. Louis and several other worthy vendors.

I have no idea whether this was done as a service or as a paid advertisement (I’d like to think it was in support of indie shops that carry Magnet on the newsstands again). Regardless, it was GREAT to see these stores that I love given national advertising and exposure. The economy sucks, times are hard for everyone, and indie record shops truly need and deserve support right now. Sure, as a record seller myself (horror conventions, Discogs.com, etc.) I am a bit biased…but record stores, like any small business, truly are the backbone of America, don’t you think?

With the closure of big stalwart record shops like Ear X-Tacy in Louisville, Kentucky and others, I always feel like it’s a good thing to urge people to support their favorite vinyl record sellers wherever they may be. Magnet Magazine, thank you for throwing your two cents into the mix with this back-cover listing of excellent record shops. I hope this is a trend that continues as there are MANY deserving and wonderful record shops that could use the exposure.

 

Vinyl Record Players For Your Automobile

by Joe Wallace
While looking for vinyl oddities today, I stumbled across a collection of photos of record players designed to be installed in a car or truck. Designed for the lover of 7-inch singles, it would be truly awesome to see these come back in a major way. Of course that would necessitate a big industry for the the seven inch single coming back, too…but is that really a bad thing?

Check out the delicious retro loveliness of these players! Some of the images are courtesy of Dark Roasted Blend, while others are from eBay, BoingBoing and other sources. The video, which is first, shows the in-car vinyl player in action…sweet.




 

Dust And Grooves In Turkey Part II

Eilon Paz, vinyl junkie and photographer extraordinaire, has another post from a visit to Turkey on his most outstanding Dust And Grooves vinyl blog.

Dust And Grooves is a Turntabling favorite–the photos are outstanding, the vinyl discussions are always interesting, and it’s a real anomaly in the world of vinyl blogging. Turntabling’s tagline includes the idea that vinyl is more of a lifestyle rather than a simple format choice, but it has to be said that Dust And Grooves does a MUCH better job of conveying that notion through pictures and interviews.

The album cover pictured to the left is fabulous–want to find a copy of that for the Turntabling Collection. And that’s another thing that’s truly awesome about Dust And Grooves–the vinyl obscurity factor is very, very high. Every time y0u find a new blog post at Dust And Grooves, you can always count on seeing new albums you didn’t know existed, and that’s a wonderful thing.

–Joe Wallace