
Eugene, OR | Oregon Rainmakers: Talking physical media with House of Records owner Greg Sutherland. .”..Then in 1999 came the iPod, and that just stopped business cold. We went five straight years where we made less money each year than the year before. We just thought there wouldn’t be any physical media because everybody was going to be listening on their iPods. What ended up happening is that people quickly discovered that iPods were easy to lose and sounded terrible, and that listening to music in earbuds is not the same as listening to music on a nice stereo system with good room sound and good speakers. Around 2005 or 2006, coincidentally or not, that’s when the resurgence of vinyl started. It was just a trickle at first, but by 2006 or 2007, we could tell something was going on.”
Coeur d’Alene, ID | Coeur d’Alene destination record store The Long Ear to close in July after 53 years in business: Business was so slow when Terry and Deon Borchard first moved their record store, the Long Ear, to Coeur d’Alene in 1985 that they relied on relatives to keep the phone line busy. “When we moved up here, nobody knew we were here,” Deon Borchard, who along with her husband has been running the shop since they lived in Big Bear Lake, California, in 1973, said. …The independent record store, which has moved around the Lake City three times and outlasted former industry giants such as Borders, Sam Goody and Hastings, will see those phones go silent in July. Their building at 1620 N. Government Way sold last summer, and the business plans to shutter when its lease expires after its owners fruitlessly searched for another new home.
Meadville, PA | A sound investment: VinylMugshot opens in downtown Meadville. …After numerous odd jobs as a caretaker, information technology worker and factory lineman, among others, Zinz found his groove in the vinyl business. He began building up his collection of records and concert posters and selling them on eBay about 26 years ago. “This is what I’ve always wanted to do,” he said of opening his own record store. In fact, he opened one in 2011 called Round Again Records on North Street, but it closed after a few years in business. This time around, he thinks vinyl is a sound investment. In the past six to 10 years, he said the interest in collectibles like records has skyrocketed.
Youngstown, OH | Weathered history of Geo’s Music on record: Embedded in the history of downtown Youngstown is an all-welcoming, musical rendezvous—record store Geo’s Music. Founded in 1998, Geo’s originally started as an idea to bring creative minds together and give them a home. For founder Geo Case, this store literally served as a home for a number of years as he was sleeping on a mattress in the back of the shop. Case said the store serves many purposes, and he is happy to be involved in the community. “This is your home place for Geo C and Tha Storm, the band, to make music, practice, write and arrange … And then we can have a hub here that people can come to buy music, or to, if you’re an artist locally, we of course love to sell your music, or t-shirts or whatever…”







Actually, of course, none of this happened, because while Suede had that classic Glam sound, they didn’t necessarily look the part. They were, for the most part, Glam in mufti, and dressed, for the most part, in fashionable black, with the notable exception of vocalist Brett Anderson, who had that vintage Brian Ferry look—sans the 1940s tailored suits and jaded sophistication—down flat.
They moved to NYC in 2023, looking for something beyond what small-town Georgia had to offer. They hit the ground running. A chance encounter with ’80s underground stalwarts Live Skull pulled them into the city’s noise scene and into orbit with Lydia Lunch and The Art Gray Noizz Quintet. In 2025, they toured with Gogol Bordello and shared stages with Bush Tetras and Jon Spencer.

Athens, GA | Wuxtry’s Golden Anniversary: Downtown Record Store Still Spinning After 50 Years. As a tenured landmark on one of the most prominent corners in the heart of downtown Athens, Wuxtry Records is a can’t-miss location both visually—with its bold blue and yellow storefront accented by large, poster-covered windows—and as destination in the hearts of music lovers of all kinds. In the current environment where Athenians have become hardened to news of iconic landmarks and beloved businesses closing their doors, it feels more triumphant than ever to celebrate an institution like
Melbourne, AU | The 50-year-old Blackburn record store started with jukebox leftovers: “I don’t think vinyl will ever go away.” Dixon Recycled Records in Blackburn has never given up on vinyl. The store, celebrating 50 years of operation this year, has been selling new and second-hand records 


And there was a simple reason for this—we were all Wang Chunging.


Los Angeles, CA | L.A.’s famed Record Parlor is opening a Long Beach store with special 100K record collection: The Record Parlour—Hollywood’s much-loved record shop that shifted tangible record shopping toward platforms like Instagram—is officially opening a Long Beach store. And it comes with a collection unlike any other. Taking over the former, short-lived Goodies space in Belmont Shore—and giving old-school Fingerprints vibes when it was its OG location in the Shore before going to DTLB and now Bixby Knolls—Parlour owner Chris Honetschlaeger has scored what he describes as “the largest single vinyl collection we’ve ever seen under one roof.” That collection? The Willie “Wax Hog” Hutchins Collection. And just when will locals be able to sift through this audiophile wonder? The Record Parlour in Long Beach
Devizes, UK | Vinyl Realm Settles Into New Home: A median haul of vinyl can weigh in, but there’s no longer a trek down Northgate Street for record collectors and musicians alike. Vinyl Realm has settled into their new location on Devizes High Street and shopping there is a much more spacious and airy experience… Much as I loved the idea of a record shop opening in Devizes, being just the way I remember and loved them in days of yore, eight years ago on that inception, I confess I put a time limit on the place. Even then the threat on High Street shopping was real, and the want for vinyl records in this digital era was questionable. But Vinyl Realm is not only bucking both trends, locally it’s been a detrimental influence on them, proving well managed music shops are 










































