Working at a record store (worth it?)
spelunk
3,400 Posts
I know a few folks on here have worked at record stores big and small in the past. The perks are obvious, getting a first pass at a large volume of used stuff that comes through before any customers see it, staff discount, etc.However, outside of the small specialty stores, almost all of the people I meet working in record stores are absolute pricks, and their actual jobs seem pretty dull. For those who have done it, was it an enjoyable experience? I'm obviously not talking about working at a store like Johnny Paycheck's or the Groove Merchant, which would be the bombdiggity (yeah, that just happened). More like your average mid-sized store that sells new & used CDs alongside a decent selection of used vinyl.
Comments
I enjoy music a whole lot more now that I'm not around it 24-7!
Either Logos or Streetlight. It is dollar/free bin heat vs. a better store that gets better records. PM me if you think homegirl at Logos can hook it up in any way.
Sundays noon-5 and Thursday nights?
Mon-Sat 42 hours for $315 after taxes and no benefits?
if you really want it i could make some phone calls to see whats up with a job there though.
let me know if you decide.
but id say avoide streetlight. just going in that store once a year creeps me out. i havent been in there in a while maybe the place has changed.
my go to jobs, in time of need are child care
and catering.
under the table and friendly people for the most part.
If there is a good community feel to the place, go for it.
35+?
2 joint per day minimum?
well said...
but, as Crink said, you could do worse; i did get paid to sit and watch, 'dude, where's my car?' and get stoned. gets old FAST, though.
Post your yearly evaluations or you are soft batch.
"Jef* is great with weed appropriation and consumption, could use some improvement in customer service."
i am glad i put in my years when i did (during college, from age 20-23), but nowadays i think i would rather stab my eyes out than work at a record store.
Record store customers are about one step above health food store customers - a high mental illness rate.
I got lucky - good pay, benefits, paid vacation, cash bonuses, and good records - which I know is not the norm. Most people I know do it for the records not the pay, and are wealthy in records not on bank statements. It's definitely not a career move unless you want to open your own store but an excellent gig to have while you go to school and figure out what you want to do (especially when you've been in school for 6 years now).
Most (not all) record store owners are control freaks and slightly paranoid so a lot of guys I meet who work in them are either held back by the owner or highly distrusted, which I imagine could be frustrating. This leads to them becoming very jaded towards record stores and life in general or they open their own stores and become paranoid control freaks themselves.
It's all trade offs - what's good for you right now and what are your priorities.
Peace,
SONIC
The dude who owns Record Collector, can't think of his name, is that dude.
If you are in a spot where you aren't as concerned about money it can be a good thing. I easily doubled or tripled my collection and it was all at a great discount. I filled in so many gaps. When you are there all the time you find lots of stuff because you know when it goes out. Now that I don't work there anymore I feel like they never have any records. You just need to be there several times a week.
So, if you want to stock up and build a collection then a record store job ain't so bad. If you have a hard time dealing with irrational or neurotic people then it's probably not so good.
I'll agree with the statment before that it's pretty easy to wake up and go do a job like that. Record stores don't open at 8 or 9. 10:30 is probably the earliest. It's a pretty casual life, listening to music the whole day, learning about new stuff.
i wish your boss and my boss could have a heart-to-heart about employee treatment... dude's about to be running the shop alone!!
my record store job has been good to me in that i have flexible hours (so necessary for a student) and my position requires no customer interaction (so necessary because the customers are fucking loopy, telling me to go back to my country, for instance)... but that paranoid control freak burn out shit is so old. i agree with the weekend job idea, i might do that myself after i graduate, just to try and keep some of the perks at least... you might not always get to see/get all heat, but do you really want to be "that guy"?
dude. saying. co.sizzle.
how old are you??? if you're young and it's a cool spot then yeah. if it's some miserly nutjob and you're just trying to see what dude is sitting on i would think about it. if you want to learn the game, there's better ways. I would say most dudes that just pound the pavement see more and more interesting pieces by virtue of being out and not sitting in a shop (of course there's housecalls those are fun). plus you wont be @ the mercy of a day wage/hourly wage if you are hustling them yourself. you can keep that loot, move records around out of the various places they end up, have trades, met and talk to people (the most important part of this whole deal) that you usually might not interact with, i don't know man.
customer service can be the pits, but man you gotta take into account YOU'RE the guy that works there (AND REALLY REALLY WANTED TO). lotta dudes gotta chill they ain't driving bentleys. THEYRE WORKING RETAIL. It's just getting people what they want and getting them on their way. Not getting hung up on judgements and shit.
Sonic is that rare dude in a great situation with people that HANDLE BI. Alot of the guys I've worked for or around DON'T pointblank (not that i'm mr. fiscalresponsibilty 2007) you may be at thier mercy when it comes down to getting money or when you want that semi rare record (dude could pay the fill-in-the-blank bill w that copy of that $50 record in vg-)
I once likened it to working in a crackhouse cept you get get to keep your clothes on and get first crack @ the rocks.