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Grex > Music2 > #149: Schoolkids closing! Eeep! Alert! |  |
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| Author |
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| 15 new of 64 responses total. |
krj
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response 50 of 64:
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Sep 13 17:47 UTC 1998 |
Perhaps what I will miss the most from Schoolkids is the loss of
their "editorial view." In some ways the store was like a music
magazine. Mark Ziemba expressed their biases well in resp:29 --
"earthy ethnic music, American and foreign" -- and from what I
see in the responses here, I suspect your alignment with that
bias determines how sad you are about the end of the store.
Schoolkids expressed its editorial view in a number of ways.
Most obvious would be the reviews they whipped up and pasted on
the fronts of CDs they were pushing. I never read them uncritically --
Schoolkids was much more enthusiastic about singer-songwriters than
I am -- but they were always pointers to albums I might want to
at least know about, if not own.
For some really obscure items, occasionally the store would just
cut out reviews from other sources and paste them on the disc.
On some discs, this at least gave you a clue of what to expect,
more so than the murky artwork.
More than anywhere else, Schoolkids is where I would go up to the
counter and ask to buy whatever they were playing in the store.
It might have been some folk singers from Corsica; it might have been
Kim Richey. Earlier this year it was Freakwater -- I was never
going to buy another Freakwater cd, as I'd felt burned by several of
their older discs, but their new release SPRINGTIME is pretty good.
Many of my jazz and blues buys have been chosen based on Schoolkids
in-store play, because I don't track those genres closely.
On one of my last trips to the store, the disc which was being played
on the jazz side was Ray Bailey/SATAN'S HORN, a rather nice electric
blues set. It was out of stock; the clerk offered to special order it
for me, but it turns out the disc is out of print, and the whole
record label has been shut down. Some people might think it was
pretty odd of a record store to give in-store play to a disc they
could not sell you, and some people might have been annoyed.
Me, I was just happy to make the introduction of Mr. Bailey; I
scribbled down the info about the disc and found a copy a few days
later at a Wazoo shop.
And that's what I'll miss the most about Schoolkids: the hopeful
optimism that on every trip there, the store will introduce me
to something new and interesting.
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anderyn
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response 51 of 64:
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Sep 14 00:43 UTC 1998 |
Yeah.... Oh. Did you get Red Rice, Ken? It's pretty good.
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bmoran
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response 52 of 64:
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Sep 14 03:34 UTC 1998 |
On a hand written divider in the pop section, I saw
Mr.Michael Bolton,Esq.
I don't think I'll see anything like that in a corp store.
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omni
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response 53 of 64:
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Sep 14 06:57 UTC 1998 |
Michael Bolton is a lawyer? I always thought he needed a backup career for
when he stops recording albums. ;)
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clees
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response 54 of 64:
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Sep 14 08:01 UTC 1998 |
It was Discount records.
Popular?
Hmmm, makes me wonder whether my taste for 'alternative' music (which
distinguishes me from the Dutch massess) isn't that alternative when it
comes to comparing it to Americans.
But the fact that I was very pleased to notice radio stations that
actually don't play house, but rock, adds seriously to the impression.
I can tell you that almost all radio stations in the Netherlands only
differ in the wavelength they're broadcasting on.
*uch*
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anderyn
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response 55 of 64:
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Sep 14 18:10 UTC 1998 |
I definitely wouldn't call Metallica alternative. Popular, definitely.
Don't know about Massive Attack. But hey -- *I* even like Metallica.
And every store in the US has it -- I mean, even Target and K-mart
and Walmarts carry a group like Metallica. So that's not what I'd
call anything hard to find. Now, me, I like hard to find stuff.
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mziemba
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response 56 of 64:
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Sep 19 12:13 UTC 1998 |
Discount Records is a Sam Goody store, a.k.a. Musicland. Those are both chain
stores.
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anderyn
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response 57 of 64:
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Sep 19 14:45 UTC 1998 |
Interestingly, though, Discount Records isn't as ... icky as the Sam Goody's
or Musicland's that I've been to. Maybe because it's smaller, not in a mall,
and has had to compete with both Skids and Borders and other stores in
the area -- the prices aren't as high, and the staff have always been
genuinely helpful to me. Even going so far as to recommend new artists that
I really liked and would never have heard.
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krj
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response 58 of 64:
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Sep 25 02:17 UTC 1998 |
I've started a new Schoolkids item for the new Agora conference.
Fall Agora #25 / Music #154.
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eeyore
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response 59 of 64:
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Oct 15 14:42 UTC 1998 |
re: 55 Not all of Metallica is easy to find. (Scott's favorite
band....sigh)
So is Schoolkids all shut down now?
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krj
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response 60 of 64:
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Oct 15 16:39 UTC 1998 |
Steve Bergman's Schoolkids, according to the ads in the Ann Arbor News,
continues limited operations in Oz's Music on Packard.
Jim Leonard's new SKR stores are being cleaned and repainted; there seemed
to be quite a bit of activity when I was downtown this past weekend.
(This is in the old Schoolkids storefronts.)
More updates in the new item #154 in Music.
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mcnally
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response 61 of 64:
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Dec 4 22:50 UTC 1998 |
perhaps as an homage to the old Schoolkids', SKR is having a 20% off
sale, tonight until 9pm only..
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cloud
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response 62 of 64:
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Dec 6 05:00 UTC 1998 |
shoot, and I was out that way just yesterday too.
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krj
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response 63 of 64:
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Dec 7 14:48 UTC 1998 |
No, it was the annual December Midnight Madness sale. Many stores
on Main Street and in the State & Liberty area were open until 11
or midnight; there were a couple of brass bands wandering around
playing carols; and the streets and sidewalks were packed.
Leslie was stuck at a rehearsal; with her visiting family
I stopped in at SKR after I took them to the Ark.
I didn't find anything of interest; I feel like my CD buying software
has crashed and is waiting for a reboot. :/
Leslie's mom picked up a couple of items, but the SKR folk bins were
not as useful to her as the old Schoolkids ones would have been, I think.
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steve
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response 64 of 64:
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Dec 27 19:07 UTC 1998 |
I pretty much remember the opening of Schoolkids; I spent a long
time there over the years, looking at the cut-out bins and such. I
didn't go there for any one specific type of music, but let myself
discover new things as I heard them played in the store, and read
the little reviews they made for certain disks.
I have no doubt that Border's did a lot of damnage to them, but
equally true I think is that we consumers played a large role. In
the era of mega-stores people look for the cheapest possible source
of commodities regardless of anything else. The people here in this
conference are the fringe I'll bet, with their tastes and desires to
support that which is local.
Schoolkids. RIP.
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