But even if we’re not inclined to leave the house, VinylHub offers a wealth of fascinating information. You can recover the romance by traveling to any one of the thousands of shops worldwide that are catalogued and mapped on VinylHub, a crowd-sourced “endeavor,” Ron Kretsch writes at Dangerous Minds, “to create an interactive map of every brick-and-mortar record store on Earth, a perfect resource for the world-traveling vinyl obsessive.”īrought to us by masterminds behind Discogs and their similar spin-off online catalogs for books, movies, etc., this project might get us out of our chairs-maybe even out of the country-and into new places to dig through the crates. Should you be among the unlucky who lack a local music store, fear not. Online streaming and buying has the regrettable effect of flattening everything into the same two dimensions without the aura of physical media and the musical paraphernalia we find in real life stores. We continue to believe in music even when it lets us down.īut have we lost faith in the record shop? I hope not. If it doesn’t work, there remains a certain magic in the transaction. Whatever ails you, you’re sure to find a remedy here. Entering a well-curated music shop can feel like walking into a medieval apothecary. But the true finds appeared among the small proprietors, merchandisers of dusty LPs in wooden bins and keepers of local music scene lore. Even the local strip mall chain might hold a surprise or two. And before nearly every musical whim could be satisfied with a few clicks, it also meant for many people finding the nearest record store. Arriving in a new city usually means finding the nearest decent grocery, pharmacy, coffee shop, bookstore, laundry, etc.
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