Posts Tagged ‘Monks’

Record Store of the Week – Mississippi Records (Portland, OR)

Tuesday, January 18th, 2011

Located some 2,500 miles from its namesake state, Mississippi Records (Portland, OR) manages to exist in an old-world cloud that floats around at 78 RPMs. Although they eschew modern conveniences like credit card machines and even cash registers, their taste and curatorial sense is very modern. Not only can you find albums by contemporary artists in the shop but just turn around and there are bins over flowing with rare folk, blues, rock, punk and all the rest. Don’t forget to check out their own releases on the Mississippi Records label, too. So saddle on up for this week’s Record Store of the Week: Mississippi Records!

Tell us some stuff about Mississippi Records.

We’re a small store in Portland that sells records, tapes, books & used stereo gear.  We’ve been around for almost 8 years & haven’t evolved much in that time – no cash register or computer or credit card machine or answering machine or any advance business tools like that.  Just inventory, a notebook & a calculator.  We did recently get a cat.

The all too familiar "downward dig" pose.

Seems like the store’s / label’s motto is “Always…Love Over Gold” which is adorned above your doorway. Can you talk a bit about this…would you call it a philosophy?

Yeah – it’s a philosophy.  I put that above the door to haunt whoever is working & whoever is shopping to making decisions based on more pressing things than finance – like asthetics & the golden rule & all that kind of thing.

it's a philosophy

And speaking of the Mississippi Records label, can you give us a brief history of it?

The first four releases (ed. – for a discography, check this link) had little to do with what came after – they were all friends projects or me & fellow label runer Alex Yusimov’s personal music projects (His being a pop LP under the name Duck Duck Grey Duck & mine being the Illegal Guardians cassette – my punk band with a 10 year old lead singer. Only 30 copies of that were made)  After those two releases an audio zine about Police brutality in Portland & a memorial record for a much loved member of our community followed.

MR005 - Various: Last Kind Words 1926-1953

A year or so later me & my old friend Warren Hill decided to start putting together reissues of stuff we liked in very small pressings.  Another old  friend of mine Alex Yusimov got in on it & started adding more punk oriented records to the catalogue.  We were lucky enough to be in the right place at the right time as not alot of labels were doing LP reissues of the type of things we were into back then even though the demand was there.

Thanks to timing & our practice of keeping everything relatively cheap we managed to sell alot of records fast which gave us the freedom to crank out alot of product. We’ve released only what is inspiring to us with little regard to whether it is salable or not. Somehow we’ve managed to keep selling this weird stuff. I am thankfull for that everyday.  We’ve released 78 records & are just getting started.

What kind of folks frequent your store, and what sort of records do they typically buy?

We get all kinds & they buy all kinds.  We have every type of music except modern electric dance stuff & modern corporate shlock (But we do have some pre 1990′s corporate shlock despite my problems with it).

I can spot at least four records on the wall that I want.

What is your favorite Light in the Attic release and why?

It’s hard to choose between the Rodriguez Cold Fact (LITA  036) record & the Monks Black Monk Time (LITA 042)…..but when shit comes to shovel I got to go with the Monks.  It was one of my favorite rock records for many years but only pretty shoddy bootlegs were available on LP for a long while that didn’t capture the true granduer of its sound.

When the Light in the Attic edition came into the store I ran not walked home with it & played it so loud the walls of my house shook.  It sounded like a holy angels choir of truth shaking down babylon like a m**ther f***ker & I was so happy.  It was like hearing it for the first time.  Just a perfect record. (ed. WOW, we couldn’t agree more!)

Special mentions got to go to the reissue of the first Karen Dalton It’s So Hard To Tell Who’s Going To Love You The Best (LITA 045) LP which made alot of my customers very happy (by making them sad) & the Wheedles Groove Seattle’s Finest In Funk & Soul 1965-75 (LITA 009) compilation because I’m a sucker for good work on documenting music scenes that haven’t been properly recognized.

OK, now for a ridiculous question. In mortal combat between Blind Lemon Jefferson and Blind Willie McTell, who would emerge as the victor?

I believe those two gentlemen would never resort to mortal combat but would rather work out there differences conversationally.  They were both very eduacated men with calm angelic demeanors despite what you might read into their personalities based on the large amount of murder ballads & lines about beating women in their song repetoires.

Musically, I think Jefferson is the more strikingly original & revolutionary guitarist (His music freaks me out a little) & McTell is the more technically impressive.  I’ll go with Jefferson even though I listen to McTell alot more.  What the hell kind of question is this? (ed. – exactly…)

What is the coolest/most prized record has come into your store that you never thought you’d ever see?

I once bought a copy of Buffalo Springfield’s second record that my sister had scrawled her name all over 27 years ago. I remembered her doing it.  The guy who brought it in bought it in New York which means it travelled from LA to New York to Portland to find me 27 years later. That tripped me out.

maybe that angel brought the record back??

What’s the funniest/weirdest/strangest encounter you’ve had with a customer in the store?

One time a lady came in & asked if we had any Gogie Grant LPs (Gogi was a middle of the road 1950s pop singer who had a hit called the Wayward Wind).  I pulled out one & showed it to here & she said, “You know, I’m Gogie Grant”  I held up the record next to her & she did indeed look like an older version of the face smiling at me from the cover.  We small talked a bit about her career back in the day & she left.

About 6 months later an ENTIRELY DIFFERENT older lady came to the store & asked if we had any Gogie Grant records. I pulled out the same record & showed it too her & she said, “You know, I’m Gogie Grant.”  Before I could ask her anything about the previous clamer of that name or the fact that she looked nothing like the women on the cover of the LP she corrected herself – ‘Well, I was the original Gogi Grant.  I had a huge hit with my first single, The Wayward Wind on Columbia Records.  Right after that I was captured by the Turks & put in a prison.  An African tribe broke me out & rode me to freedom atop a glowing albino elephant.  I stayed amongst the tribe as their Queen for many years but soon grew homesick.  When I came back to the states I was mortified to find that Columbia Records had hired a proxy to capitalize on my hit song.  They had some other lady…the lady on the cover of this LP….recording & touring under my name.  It was tragic.”

Gogi...where are you really???

Whatever the real story may be, I thought it was amazing that the two Gogi Grants would both happen to stumble into the same record store to tell their tales so close in time to eachother.  I have since looked at many photos of Gogi Grant & have found a few early press photos that more closely resemble the African princess version of Gogi than the one on the LP.

What do you love most about working at a cool independent record shop?

It gives me a good reason to put on a suit & tie everyday.

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Mississippi Records
4007 North Mississippi Avenue
Portland, OR 97227
(503) 282-2990

Record Store of the Week: House of Records (Eugene, OR)

Wednesday, May 18th, 2011

I’m sure it’s a dream shared by all record heads–your very own house filled with records! While some have made it a reality for themselves, the rest of us must be content to make the trip to Eugene, Oregon’s House of Records, our Record Store of the Week. Opened for business the same year that Serge Gainsbourg’s Histoire de Melody Nelson and John Lennon’s Imagine were released (how’s that for perspective), House of Records is an Eugene institution and a must-see destination on your next NW record digging trip. It’s the blue house, down on the right. Just follow the smells of records!

Thanks to Fred Murschal and the House of Records staff for doing the interview!

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What kind of folks frequent your store, and what sort of records do they typically buy?

We get all kinds, but most are “typical” Eugeneans: well-educated and a little off-center. We sell some of everything, but our best-selling genres are the biggies: rock, blues, soul, country, jazz, hip hop and reggae.

Is there a record you play that someone will usually buy/inquire about every time?

That doesn’t happen as much as it used to, but we still have some luck playing Daptone releases in the store. Also Fleet Foxes and The Obits (chapeau atilt to Sub Pop).

What is your favorite Light in the Attic release and why?

Greg & Martha: The Monks Black Monk Time because it rocks! An all-time favorite.

Katie: Karen Dalton In My Own Time: A nearly perfect record, each song superlative, singular.

Fred: The Free Design catalogue is still my favorite because of the band’s fearless vulnerability.

What’s your favorite record right now?

Greg: The Stairsteps Step By Step By Step (Buddah 5068 – You guys need to reissue this record!)
Martha: Robert Plant Pictures at Eleven
Katie: Ian and Sylvia, et al Great Speckled Bird
Fred:
suddenly, tammy! Comet.Warner Brothers dropped the band (and a lot of other bands) in the mid 90’s and their third album was never released. It has finally seen the light of day as an MP3 download and it is brilliant! Beth Sorrentino is an incredible songwriter.

What’s the funniest/weirdest/strangest encounter you’ve had with a customer in the store?

Every day we field a phone call from an autistic middle-aged man with an East Coast accent named James. He wants to know what we are wearing down to the color of our socks, who else is working (Marilyn Monroe, Rumplestiltskin, etc.), and the price of 30 unspecified records (along with a litany of other enumerated formats). He always promises to bring a dollar and a penny more than the price quoted and to come in for them every day between tomorrow and Saturday! Trying to derail the trajectory of his inquiries in new and inventive ways is a challenging good time.

Greg adds: A guy with a knit cap and long white beard sold me some tapes. When I asked him for his identification he told me his name was Franz Kafka. Next time he came in I asked him to autograph my copy of The Trial. He signed it “To Greg, from the grave. May all your nightmares come true.”

What is the coolest/most prized record that has come into your store that you never thought you’d ever see?

Greg: Original pressing of Introducing The Beatles with the album ads back cover.
Martha: Chrome Half Machine Lip Moves with the poster!
Katie: Robbie Basho The Falconer’s Arm II
Fred: Big Star No. 1 Record white label promo (about 20 years ago).

What’s the scene like out in Eugene? Do you carry any local artists?

There used to be a “Eugene scene” in the 1980’s and early ‘90’s. Now there are lots of little scenes independent of each other. We carry LOTS of local artists, and they produce music of all varieties!

What do you love most about working at a cool independent record shop?

1. Seeing LP’s rise from the dead. It’s very romantic.
2. Talking to customers about music.
3. Working in the basement in the narrow aisles of LPs.
4. I get to deejay all day long!
5. Listening and learning.
6. Making suggestions and seeing people get excited about something I love.
7. The smell of records.

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House of Records
258 E. 13th Ave.
Eugene, OR 97401
(541)342-7975
Monday through Saturday 10AM to 7PM
Sunday 11AM to 6PM

Find House of Records on Facebook and Twitter!

Light In The Attic – Influencer Spotlight on Rdio

Wednesday, January 4th, 2012

Head on over to the Rdio blog for their Influencer Spotlight on Light In The Attic. They go into our background, covering some of our mile stone releases and there’s even a list of some of our favorite reissues of all time, which they have available for streaming.

Be sure to follow our profile and check out some of our label curated playlists, one of which, “Light In The Attic on Rdio” is below.

Free Basin’ Fridays – Black Monk Time (BACK IN PRINT!)

Friday, June 1st, 2012

After being out of print on vinyl for a while, we finally have back in stock The Monks garage/psych masterpiece Black Monk Time. For this Free Basin’ Fridays just leave a comment below with your name and email address (kept private) and send us a photo of your head shaved Monk style! OK, we’re kidding on that part…just send some love our way and the winner of the LP will be picked at random next Friday, June 8 at 12PM pst!