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Tuesday Thoughts: Record Shops

December 11, 2018 at 11:17 am by Claudia

Stella asked to be included in the Christmas decorating and I have complied.

I might be adding a wee bit more today. But just a bit.

Yesterday was about running errands. Boring, but necessary. Because I freelance and am home a great deal of the time, I find myself moving slowly in the morning only to look up at the clock and see that it’s almost noon, which means there are only 4 more hours of daylight left. It always shocks me.

I ran into Barnes & Noble yesterday to look for a book which they, of course, did not have. While I was there I looked through the vinyl albums and CDs. Nothing I wanted in stock. I felt a wave of nostalgia and yearning for the days when I could visit a record store and spend hours looking through albums. I would search for something and invariably find it. In the course of the search, I would discover new artists. I’d chat with the expert sales staff. I’d talk to other music lovers.

It’s all gone now.

Now I’m forced to find a vintage vinyl shop with limited stock somewhere or order online, which is not the same as thumbing through albums or CDs, reading the liner notes, holding the album in my hands, accumulating a pile of albums to take up to the cash register, knowing that a great new-to-me listening experience lies ahead. Every time I see that scene in Hannah and Her Sisters  in which Woody Allen comes upon Dianne Wiest in Tower Records and they look through the albums together, I get so sad for something that has been lost, never to be found again.

Don and I had a big conversation yesterday about this, fueled by my reaction to the dearth of stock at B & N. This led to mourning for a way of life, for expert staff that knew everything about music and artists, for the opportunity to discover music, not streaming it, but holding it in your hands, reading the liner notes, looking at the artwork, placing the album on the turntable. We talked about how many hours we spent reading liner notes when we were young, bedroom door closed, stereo on, lazing on our beds, drinking in the sounds.

There was a great record shop in Ann Arbor when I was still living in Michigan called Liberty Music Shop – it was there for 50 years. My friend Joe actually worked there while he was getting his Master’s Degree from the University of Michigan (resulting in a stellar collection of albums). The staff knew everything about their stock and if they didn’t have it, they’d find it for you. They had actual listening rooms where you could listen to an album you were thinking about buying before you plunked down your hard-earned money. The stock was heavily classical, but there were plenty of other genres as well. No one minded if you spent hours there or wanted to sample an album before you bought it. I loved going there. I also loved going to Dearborn Music, in my hometown, which was my go-to source for records. Or Rose Records, when I visited Chicago. Even the basement of my college bookstore had more vinyl than B & N has now. And, when Tower Records came along, I went there. Now, there’s really nothing.

Don talked about Folk Arts Rare Records in San Diego (very near to our house) where the owner, Lou Curtiss, had an encyclopedic knowledge of all sorts of music, especially Folk and Americana, but really – everything. Lou died this past summer, may he rest in peace. His knowledge was so vast that the Smithsonian and Library of Congress digitized his vast collection. At one point, Don was going to direct a period play that took place in England in the twenties and he walked into the shop, told Lou about the play, and within 30 minutes, he had everything he needed for his score. Where do we find that sort of expertise nowadays?

I mean, really, we’re left with B & N as our source of recordings? Or sampling 30 seconds of a song on Amazon and basing our choice on that?

I’m encouraged by the resurgence of vinyl but I don’t think it will ever get back to the way it was in terms of sales and stores and everything I loved about shopping for music. The same with CDs. And because there are very few facilities pressing vinyl, the cost is much higher than it used to be.

As you know, my collection of hundreds of LPs was ruined in storage – too many years of having no place to put them led to warping and mustiness. I mourn those records on a daily basis and am ever-so-slowly trying to find copies in used record stores to add to our current collection. So many times I hear a song in The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel  and I shout out to Don: “I had that album!” And I want to find it again.

Luckily, we do have a few vintage record shops in our area. But I want to see more new vinyl records issued. I want to see shops that specialize in records and CDs. I want to pull the plastic wrap off of a new LP and read the liner notes. By the way, Anastasia  is coming out on vinyl in the next few weeks. Rest assured, I will be buying a copy.

Yes, we have lots of technological advances. But at what cost?

Thoughts on a Tuesday.

Happy Tuesday,

 

Filed Under: record albums 26 Comments

On Monday

December 10, 2018 at 10:49 am by Claudia

The vase and the match striker needed to be placed elsewhere while the Christmas tree is up. They don’t look half bad on this little desk.

The pansies needed to be brought inside because I missed the fact that we’d had a very cold night and they were almost gone. To be honest, even though they’re better now, they’re still wobbly. I can’t ignore a plant in need. It must be in my DNA. Never say die until it’s truly gone. And they’ve been so valiant that I want to keep them going as long as I can.

We ended up going to another restaurant yesterday – one that’s known for serving breakfast. It’s my favorite local breakfast place but I hadn’t been there in a long time. On any given day, especially when the university is in session, there are long lines of people waiting to get a table. We went a bit later in the day yesterday and there was still a line, but we got a table pretty quickly. Oh my heavens, was breakfast tasty! We were running out of time, so we just made a flying visit to the bookstore and then headed back to the little theater. It’s a really nice black box space that’s made to be flexible according to the needs of the production. I’ve spent hundreds of hours in my teaching and coaching life in black box theaters. I know them well.

The production was interesting – a new play by a young playwright. A young director. A young, relatively new-to-the profession cast. Don tells me that the first play in the season had a couple of older, more experienced actors. But this script was about young millennials, so the actors had to be young as well.

It was okay – but just okay. Halfway through, I realized that it was like hundreds of acting projects I’d seen when I was teaching on an undergraduate level in Boston. I felt like I was back in Boston at a time when I was seeing countless projects on a weekly basis. The students at BU were very talented (many of them work professionally today and are names you would know) and they were always interesting to watch, but they were still students and it showed. That’s what this cast was like, even though they aren’t students any longer.

Since the theater is new and can’t afford to pay much to the actors, that level of actor is what they’re going to get until they can pay more and, hopefully, that will come with time. The play needs work, but it is imaginative and has promise. We’ll keep supporting what they’re doing but, having taught for so many years, I felt like I was back in the SFA building on Commonwealth Avenue watching an interesting student project, so I was a bit disappointed.

Then we came home, had dinner and finished watching Season 2 of The Marvelous Mrs. Maisel. Heavens, I love that show. The first few episodes left us worried that they were going in a strange direction, but after hanging in there, we saw what the overall arc was and it all came together. Brilliant writing, acting, direction, art direction, and costume design. The best thing since sliced bread.

Now we’re going to watch it all over again, cause that’s how we roll.

Very cold out there but sunny. Something tells me this is going to be a very cold winter and it isn’t even winter yet!

Happy Monday.

 

Filed Under: life 14 Comments

On Tap for Sunday

December 9, 2018 at 10:14 am by Claudia

Sunday morning. And, as I write this, I see the sun has just come out. It’s a fickle thing, the sun. It emerges for a couple of hours, tricking us into thinking the entire day will be sunny, and then it hides behind clouds for the rest of the day, leaving us feeling betrayed somehow. So I hope it remains sunny, but I’m not counting on it.

I just finished another James Lee Burke – this one was Glass Rainbow. There was a time when I read every new book in the Dave Robicheaux series and then I didn’t. I’m not sure why, though I suspect it had to do with that period when I was reviewing books right and left and had very little time to read for pleasure. I read his newest and was blown away once again by his writing. So I went back to pick up the four or five books that I missed and I’m almost caught up. Burke is a poet, a man of the South whose writing is achingly beautiful even as he is writing about murder and detectives and brutality. I put Burke and Louise Penny at the top of my Favorite Writers List. That’s another reason I haven’t started Penny’s newest, though it’s sitting here on my coffee table. I usually delay that pleasure, knowing that I have it ready and waiting for the perfect time to dig in, but I’m also in Burke mode and I don’t want to leave that world yet.

I’m starting Creole Belle  today. He writes about Louisiana and the bayou and New Orleans and I must admit, his work resonates even more with me now that I’ve spent time in New Orleans. Heavens, he is good.

What else? There’s a new theater company in a neighboring town. They’ve built a small black box theater and their second show is in previews right now. Don has been supportive of them since the beginning because the little theater is very near to where he often takes photos and he knows the owner and the artistic director. Theaters need audiences to thrive and a theater that is just starting out struggles with building an audience. So we’re going to a matinee of their newest production – a new play by a young playwright. Don went to their opening production and was very impressed by their work.

We’re going to head out a little early and stop by the bookstore and maybe grab a bite to eat in our favorite vegan restaurant.

Happy Sunday.

Filed Under: books, bookstores, reading, theater 20 Comments

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Welcome!

Welcome!

I live in a little cottage in the country with my husband. It's a sweet place, sheltered by old trees and surrounded by gardens. The inside is full of the things we love. I love to write, I love my camera, I love creating, I love gardening. My decorating style is eclectic; full of vintage and a bit of whimsy.

I've worked in the theater for more years than I can count. I'm currently a voice, speech, dialect and text coach freelancing on Broadway, off Broadway, and in regional theater.

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