The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsLogDog75
(1,161 posts)Local record stores were fun to browse for new and older albums when I was a teenager in the 60s.
When Tower Records went nationwide as well as overseas, I shopped for records there. Stationed in England, whenever I traveled to London I'd visit the Tower Records store in Piccadilly Circus. It was a multi-storied building but not very wide. It had just about any genre of music you were looking for.
The Tower Records store in Sacramento also carried a variety of non-music related books as well as records.
I miss Tower Records.
hlthe2b
(113,193 posts)It was the go-to spot later on Christmas Day or Thanksgiving when both staff and shoppers were clearly looking for a "break" from family, visitors, and probably some overly alcohol-imbibed relatives. The employees were so fun and they always played music I like. But, given this was central Denver, you'd come across the most interesting people from everywhere so that was reflected in all the genres of music tucked away in the armchair and listening stations around this really big store. Boy, do I miss it.
The youngsters will never know what they missed.
SheltieLover
(78,205 posts)quaint
(4,800 posts)How many friends fit into the listening booth before the manager gets steamed?
rsdsharp
(11,864 posts)worked at a Tower Records in LA when he was in his teens. He used to regularly throw out Neil Young for smoking pot in the listening booths.
Srkdqltr
(9,509 posts)That was in the 50's. They were small then. It was just a house on the block.
surrealAmerican
(11,790 posts)I do remember buying records that were warped by shrink wrap.

