Bleeker Bob's documentary
DJBombjack
Miami 1,665 Posts
http://www.capitalnewyork.com/article/culture/2012/07/6226589/records-capital-presents-documentary-about-final-days-bleecker-bobs
Hate him or love him... sad to see another store's demise
Hate him or love him... sad to see another store's demise
Comments
Couldnt mess w/ the vibe and selection. And this was the 80s.
They and Rock & Soul were on some smug shit when it came down to Hip Hop BITD.
R&S kicked out the House cats and gave into the Beats Yo dudes.
But me and my boy ran up in BB To find some overpriced Bootleg Prince steez.
Seem to remember not spending much time at BB.
Bought some stuff at a place called Venus (?).
Tower had a huge cut out store and spent most my time there wishing I had more than $20-30 to spend. Tons of Folkways.
Dude had paper swabs stuck to his face to stem a random selection of shaving cuts.
When the guy sadly laments the demise of the record store...all while pricing these common, everyday rock LPs.
I know one man's steak is another man's baloney, but that was one boring stack of albums he was pricing (Kansas!), and they'd need more than that to keep the customers coming back.
If any of those longplayers were retailing for more than $6, no wonder the store is in trouble.
I wish that was in the documentary
Kansas LPs for $10, $$$ loft disco 12"s for $5. This is why a store goes out of business.
exactly. frankly, it should have happened years ago.
the funny thing is that if one didn't know anything about records and one saw that manipulative, maudlin documentary, one would likely come away with the impression that the closure is due to the fickle, cheap, greedy, soul-less public and changing economic times rather than their horrible business practices.
yes, good point! although to be fair i imagine a lot of their business is tourists coming in looking for super common rock titles...but i have no idea. i just know that i find stuff there every now and then that makes me happy...but usually i walk away empty handed.
I saw another doc, think it was called The Last Record Store, some kinda thing.
Featured store was closing cause they lost their lease, but the doc was about record stores closing because of the fickle, cheap, greedy, soul-less public and changing times.
We don't need these docs. We don't need docs that show record collectors as pathetic losers (even thought we are).
We need docs that show that records are a viable music format that people still use.
Weekly I hear, "A record store, I didn't know there were any left. Does any one still listen to records".
Even though Portland has more than 20 record stores.