Black Friday Record Store Day 2024.


 

It’s been 24 hours, and the subject of this year’s Black Friday Record Store Day has not been brought up. I wonder if that is because not many here participated, or because the subject is not gear-centric enough? For those who did participate, I thought listing our 2024 RSD acquisitions might be of interest to other participants.

There is a growing feeling in the Vinyl Community that the prices of RSD titles has gotten out of hand. I myself pass on some titles because of their prices. One reason I do that is because my main LP shop---Millennium Music in Portland, Oregon---is a major player in RSD, and receives at least a full carton of every RSD title, many titles multiple cartons. The shop therefore often has copies left after RSD, and ends up sale-pricing them shortly thereafter. A $60 title will in some cases be available for $40, a $50 title $30.

I got up at 4:00 a.m., and was in line by 4:30. The shop opens at 8:00 on RSD, so I had a 3-1/2 hour wait (I brought the book I’m reading---The Double Life Of Bob Dylan: A Restless, Hungry Feeling 1941-1966 by Clinton Heylin. Lots of others in line kept themselves entertained on their i-phones). It was fairly brisk out (by about 6:30 my toes were numb), but a couple of my most desired titles were pressed in pretty low numbers. I don’t usually go to RSD that early (6:00 in more typical), and have missed out on only one title in the years I’ve been attending. That title was easily found at a shop in Northern Washington the next day, and with no inflation of the price.

I perused the RSD titles online, and made a list of the ones I was pretty sure I wanted. All but one were "RSD First" titles, which means the involved record label intends to release the title as a "normal" release some time in the future. If a given title is very important to me, I assume it’s release may in fact never materialize, and buy it on RSD. Here’s what I bought, all titles previously unavailable:

 

- The Blasters: Live At The Venue, London: The Complete Concert (1500 copies worldwide). $44.99 for 2-LP’s. The full original Blasters line-up, with brothers Dave and Phil Alvin, Gene Taylor on piano, and Lee Allen and Steve Berlin on saxes---the latter now a Portland resident.

- Buffalo Springfield/The Byrds: Live At The Monterey International Pop Festival (3000 copies). $39.99 for 2-LP’s.

- The Flamin’ Groovies: Let It Rock: Live From The San Francisco Civic Center 1980 (1200 copies). $24.99 for 1-LP. The group I was playing in in 1981 got an offer to open for The Groovies at a small club in SF that Summer, so we drove up from L.A. to do it. Meeting Cyril Jordan was a joy, and we got on like the soul brothers we are. Some fault The Groovies for being too derivative, but not me. They are possessed by as deep a love of Rock ’n’ Roll as anyone I can think of. Their Dave Edmunds-produced Shake Some Action is a-maz-ing, one of my all-time Top 10 albums.

 

There were two other titles I was interested in, but decided to pass on:

 

- Jesse Ed Davis: Tomorrow May Not Be Your Day---The Unissued Atco Recordings 1970-1971 (1000 Copies). This one of the RSD First titles, so I decided to wait for it’s eventual normal release. It’s RSD price of $59.99 for 2-LP’s was just a little too high for me. If Music Millennium ends up marking it down I’ll pick it up then.

- David Grisman: Dawg ’90 Deluxe (1300 copies). I like Grisman, but don’t love him, and didn’t feel like paying $49.99 for this 2-LP set.

 

The RSD path through the store passed by racks containing non-RSD titles, priced to sell. So I picked up the new release by Billy Strings: Highway Prayers, marked down from $49.99 to $29.99.

 

And you?

 

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Bob Bradley is one of my favorite Vinyl Community content providers, his YouTube videos being well worth the time it takes to watch them. Though our musical tastes overlap only marginally, I really like Bob's personality, and his perspective on LP's (vinyls for you kids) from a musician's point-of-view. He also wins points for playing his records on either a Thorens TD-124 (fitted with a Grado pickup) or a VPI "something" model. Here's Bob's report on this year's Black Friday Record Store Day:

 

https://youtu.be/HWYysNDsq38?si=n2Q_GptdKD5eBdMX

 

 

I don’t buy any new vinyl.  I am digitally oriented, but I do buy old LPs that have not been digitized.  My genre is Classical and many LPs that I had back in the day had limited sales relative to other more popular genres and there are still old favorites that are unavailable except analog, and I love hunting the shelves of resale shops for them.

  When I see the prices asked for for new LPs, I just shake my head 

Eric, I thought the pricing is out of control, especially given the history of "Black Friday" pricing is normally associated with nice discounts. In addition , the buyer is taking a big chance on pressing quality and sound quality. Would’ve liked to own that Buffalo Springfield/Byrds set. The Blasters piqued my interest as well.