Story comes courtesy of MarPop By Mar Yvette Lookin’ for a rekka sto’?? Ease up, old school. Downloading and streaming aren’t the only game in town. Vinyl is making a serious comeback. In fact, within the last few years LA has seen more than a few independently owned record stores set up shop. And it’s this sort of indie spirit that’s driving the recent surge of vinyl record sales across the country. Now, just in time for the holidays: Record Store Day — a collective of some 900 independently owned record stores in the US, Canada and Europe — is holding their own Black Friday on November 25 with special-edition vinyl releases and sales. So before you join the herds and head off to the mall at 4am, consider checking out some of these LA record stores for a little vinyl revival. AMOEBA RECORDS – www.amoeba.com Think record store and you think Amoeba. Probably because itâs the largest independent record store in the world. (Some would say too large, bordering on big-box bully large, but thatâs another story.) This ginormous Hollywood outpost literally has tons of albums, discs, posters and other music-related mishmash as well as constant in-store shows. As for vinyl, youâll find plenty including limited edition, rare, out-of-print and original pressings. AS THE RECORD TURNS – www.astherecordturns.com Cringe-worthy name aside, As the Record Turns is considered by many to be LA’s best resource for vinyl. Once you find the actual store (it’s hidden in a narrow alleyway off Hollywood Blvd) get ready to find just about any piece of vinyl you can imagine. And if it’s not stockpiled in the exhaustive stacks of vinyl, then owner Kevin can probably find it for you one way or another. Just ask Jay-Z, Dr. Dre, Marilyn Manson, Steven Speilberg and about a million other famous clients for whom he’s sourced music. You might pay more for what you get, but Kevin is known to give a free record to everybody who enters his store. (They’re from the clearance section, but are you really gonna complain?) Amoeba from above: Photo by Kelly Wardle ATOMIC RECORDS – www.atomicrecordsla.com Picked in 2011 by LA Weekly as âBest Record Store for Actual Records,â this Burbank record shop has been open since 1996 and specializes in classic jazz, 60s rock/punk/new wave, soul, blues, strange/exotica and soundtracks. They also do a lot of buying and even make house calls. Don’t forget the 50-cent bin where you just might strike vinyl gold. FREAKBEAT RECORDS – www.freakbeatrecords.com Forget the 99-cent store. This old-school shop in Sherman Oaks has a 99-cent room with thousands of LPs and CDs that are restocked every day. Half the store is filled with new and used vinyl, with the rock section being the largest, and there’s plenty to browse in the jazz and soul bins. There’s also an 80s department with lots of flashback vinyl. ORIGAMI VINYL – www.origamiorigami.com One of the newer shops on the block (it opened in 2009), Origami Vinyl in Echo Park is the ultimate mom and pop record store for cool kids. The shop is only 400 square feet, but it packs a punch with an eclectic selection of new and used records, much of which is from local artists. (Origami is also an indie record label.) As for in-stores, everyone from Florence and the Machine to Sonic Youth and Ben Harper have taken to the stage. Good things come in small packages. Records LA: Noize n the ‘Hood RECORDS LA – www.myspace.com/recordsla Records LA isn’t the oldest rekka sto’ in LA. In fact, it opened in 2010. But it is the oldest school of the old school with an unpretentious DIY charm that’s hard to come by these days. Located on West Adams, the vinyl-only shop is about the size of your one-bedroom apartment’s closet, but owner Scott has just the stuff you’re looking for when it comes to soul, jazz, R&B, disco, hip hop, reggae and other back-in-the-day rarities. Just remember: this shop is only open Thursday-Saturday. RECORD SURPLUS – www.recordsurplus.com One of the largest sellers of used vinyl records and CDs on the West Coast, Record Surplus has a huge selection of music and collectible records that are restocked daily. The store just moved to a new location on the corner of Santa Monica and Centinela with a nice paint job, too. (Not that I judge a record store by its cover, but I do like a pretty space.) You can also find turntables and CD listening stations. ROCKAWAY RECORDS – www.rockaway.com This Silver Lake staple is fairly small (it’s moved a few times since first opening in 1979), but it’s huge on the collectibles inventory. Vinyl, CDs and the usual suspects are here as well as lots of memorabilia ranging from $50 autographed photos to a 1965 Beatles lunch box that can be yours for just $1,250. Werk It: Wombleton Records VACATION VINYL – www.vacationvinyl.com The name might suggest lounging around a sunny beach with a drink in your hand (or maybe that’s just me), but this Silver Lake shop is far from checked-out and actually leans a little toward the dark side. Which is to say, you can find a lot of black metal/hardcore/space rock/prog drone/whatever-you-call-it noisy stuff neatly arranged among the shelves. Plenty of in-store shows, too. WOMBLETON RECORDS – www.wombletonrecords.com Part of the new York strip of Highland Park emerging with little shops, galleries and bars, Wombleton Records is just the kinda thing you didn’t know you need: Bountiful bins of rare pop vinyl you can peruse whilst basking in an Edwardian salon that could double as a swinging London boutique. Opened in late 2010, Wombleton specializes in original pressings of rare, imported used vinyl LPs and 45s with “an uncommonly high concentration of desirable titles from the country of origin.” Stop by on Thursday nights for the vinyl DJ listening parties. Ascot and smoking jacket optional. MORE VINYL RECORD STORES IN LA: Angel City Books & Records – Best-kept record store secret in Santa Monica Backside Records – Mostly clothing, new & used vinyl in Burbank and Echo Park Bombass Muzik – Vinyl, CDs, cassettes & accessories in East LA Headline Records – punk, thrash, straight-edge, rockabilly, psychobilly on Melrose Ooga Booga – super-indie shop for vinyl, art, books, misc in Downtown LA Poo-Bah Record Shop – underground hip-hop, experimental & more in Pasadena Record Collector – rare and collectible classical & jazz in Hollywood Turntable Lab – vinyl for DJs who actually scratch; Fairfax Village More info: www.recordstoreday.com See the rest here: Vinyl Revival: Record Stores In Los Angeles (Yes, They Exist!)
Posts Tagged ‘ music ’
"California Brain" RapScallions
“California Brain” is a 2011 rock/hip hop song about Los Angeles by the rock band RapScallions from Hollywood, California. A song with lyrics critical of television’s American Idol , “California Brain” challenges performers dreaming of making it in the music business to stay true to their own dreams — to not sell out to a cookie-cutter path to recognition and stardom in Hollywood. This is the place The city of dreamers where angels are made Devils are born, money is stored And souls are picked up like street corner whores Cali is the place where you have to perform They will try to brainwash, they will try to conform Just stand your ground and go against the norm ‘Cause Cali is the place that will let you soar RapScallions’ aggressively-catchy sound fits into the rock sub-genre long dominated by fellow L.A. band, Red Hot Chili Peppers , but RapScallions definitely have a groove that is uniquely their own. Typical of California’s multicultural mix, RapScallions members each came from somewhere else to form their band in Hollywood.
New Music: Drake & Rihanna ‘Take Care’
Check out this hot duo on duet for ‘Take Care’. It’s the title track for Drake’s upcoming album. Link: New Music: Drake & Rihanna ‘Take Care’
James Scarborough: Snooty and the Beast, All American Melodrama Theatre & Music Hall/Screaming Mimi!, Act Out Mystery Theatre
Two current Long Beach productions present live theatre at its best. Each production amounts to a world premiere, the actors perform in our space, and we get to eat and be enchanted. The productions’ sense of audience, actor, and audience cum actor interaction is keen; it causes the Fourth Wall to crash down as, one way or another, we participate in the production. Snooty and the Beast, All American Melodrama Theatre & Music Hall Written and directed by Ken Parks, with music by Parks and Rick Illes, for the All American Melodrama Theater & Music Hall, Snooty and the Beast, represents the theatrical equivalent of “Goofus and Gallant,” the life lesson found in each issue of the Highlights for Children magazine. Legible and fun for children, it’s even funnier for adults. Our heroine, for instance, is named Belle or she’s called Beauty — never just one. Why? Because of the ever-present threat of legal action by Disney. Along with children, we also learn to deal with unpleasant people. Wouldn’t it be nice to simply boo and hiss office Machiavellis and bumptious bosses instead of plotting bottom line- and morale-sapping revenge? The story sets up quickly, the issue’s clear. Prince Edward Overheels (Ken White) vies with his evil stepmother Urika Garlic (Dawn Stahlak) for the fortune left by their recently-deceased King. The King leaves but one stipulation: If Edward falls in love within a prescribed amount of time, he inherits the kingdom; if he doesn’t, it reverts to Urika. Easy, right? Not only is Edward stalwart and handsome, sensitive and honest, his voice (White’s voice) is mesmerizing and captivating. Problem is, Urika, devious and shrew-like, has turned The Girl Most Likely to Marry Edward, Beauty or Belle (Amber Hubbard) into the most overbearing girl this side of the San Fernando Valley. Though we have no doubt who will triumph — in melodramas, we never do –it’s the unfolding of the struggle that makes the production so successful. The story is fall-down-the-stairs funny. Rousing and spirited, always over the top, it keeps us in stitches, beginning with the first song, “Legally Allowable Tale,” which explains why Beauty or Belle can’t consistently be called one or the other. The production is well-paced, metronomed by Jimmy Dunn’s saloon-style piano playing and punctuated by our boos, yays, and aws. Despite the predictable outcome, we’re happy when it occurs, for it confirms what we at least hope on stage if not in real life, that the good guys will win. The acting rocks. Stahlak’s Urika reeks with unpleasantness. Greedy, covetous, and jealous, she presents us with what we imagine to be the face behind horrible telephone customer service. She’s cranky, loud, and snarky, in short, she doesn’t have one redeeming quality. She’s self-conscious of her unpleasantness, proud, in fact: to make Beauty or Belle undesirable to Edward, she clones herself. When Hubbard’s Beauty or Belle is sweet, she’s either Rebecca of Sunnybrook Farm or Shirley Temple: earnest, sincere, and squeaky clean, as if she’s been polished with Lemon Pledge. As the clone-of-Urika, though (the transformation’s magnificent), she’s whiny and pouty, with a voice that could make satellites fall out of the sky. White’s Edward makes us older folk think of Dudley Do-Right from the Rocky and Bullwinkle Show . For those a few generations younger, think of Edward Cullen, from the Twilight series. He exudes humility and forthrightness, as befits a melodrama Hero. His manners seem to come from long, long ago. The little touches are memorable. Urika consults a Magic Mirror, set above the stage, as to how best thrwart the union of Edward and Beauty or Belle. Of course the Mirror resembles an iPad, of course it has an app to turn a girl next door into a b&*%h. Besides the requisite enchanted castle there’s a place called The Horse You Rode Inn, wherein dwells the Beast (White). And tweeting is conducted, yes, with a crow that drops from the ceiling ala The Groucho Marx Show . Performances are 7:30 pm, Friday and Saturday, 4:30 pm Saturday and 7:00 pm Sunday. The play runs until November 6. Tickets are $14-20. The Theater is located at 429 Shoreline Village Drive, Long Beach. For more information call (562) 495-5900 or visit www.allamericanmelodrama.com. Screaming Mimi!, Act Out Mystery Theatre The Halloween-themed Screaming Mimi!, written and directed by Paul Vander Roest for Act Out Mystery Theatre and staged at the Reef Restaurant may offer the formulaic unpleasantness of a murder and its hilarious solution, but, oh, what a formula! Vander Roest presents a goody bag that brims with cinematic references. Peopled with an ungodly number of wacky characters played to perfection by a cast of four, the story, its enactment, and the setting offer a rollicking interlude of tricks and treats. Though it seems to fly by the seat of its pants, the story’s tightly constructed plot begins with the reading of the will of the recently deceased Miss Mimi, an action that brings out the worst in her eager-to-profit household staff. It carries through with the murder of attorney Barry Mason (Carson Gilmore), who’s going to execute the will, at which time the story turns into a homicide to be solved by Detective Boris Barlift (Gilmore). There’s the revelation that Mimi herself might have been murdered, which makes this a possible double homicide. And there are the various motives and alibis, plausible and im-, all of which lead to the eventual solving of the crime. Though you wonder afterwards how you could have just seen almost twenty characters packed into a 3-act play, it passes by so fast, is to perfectly paced and so outlandishly funny that the whole thing bristles with laughter and mirth, from salad, through the main course, to dessert. So well-defined are the theatrical personas of Rigores, Gilmore, and Vander Roest that the production feels more like goofing around in a living room than like acting on a stage. Rigores is chihuahua-hilarious, always in motion, always exaggerating to brilliant effect her voice, her gestures, and her movements. Gilmore ponders a lot and, if he’s not exactly reflective, then at least he’s the most pensive of the trio. He’s the exact opposite of Vander Roest who, Mardi Gras outrageous, is always larger than life. They play off each other perfectly, blend well with their other cohorts, and are stupendous — Rigores, especially — with the various audience members assigned walk-on roles. Whether she’s Mrs. Dithers, the melodramatic, semi-English housekeeper or Eeyore the Attention Deficit Disordered chauffeur, Lara Starr Rigores is funny even if she’s not the center of attention. Her delivery (high-pitched, lilting) carries a wallop. As Barry Mason, the paunchy attorney who’s never lost a case or as Detective Boris Barlift, a vampiric Columbo, Gilmore carries the story forward, lurching about at times, often sidetracked, but always forward. Vander Roest brings a sense of Mardi Gras outrageousness to both Glow, the huba-hubba Southern cook with a signature “Kiss my grits!” phrase or Morbid Mulch the ornery gardener. Finally, Melinda Parker makes her broom-wielding Witch Hazel, the cackling downstairs maid astringent and snarky and her Mae East, the upstairs maid ( Come up and see me sometime ), the epitome of va-va-voom. The cast flings the witty dialogue like a cafeteria food fight. The cherry that tops this luscious sundae splattered against the wall consists of a hilarious exchange reminiscent of Abbot and Costello’s iconic “Who’s on First?” that involves a play on “Werewolf/Where, wolf?” and “There, wolf.” Performances are 7:00 pm, Friday and Saturday, 1:30 pm Sunday. The show runs until November 5. Tickets are $49.95 (dinner and show). The Restaurant is located at 880 Harbor Scenic Drive, Long Beach. For more information call (562) 961-9862 or visit www.actoutmystery.com. View original post here: James Scarborough: Snooty and the Beast, All American Melodrama Theatre & Music Hall/Screaming Mimi!, Act Out Mystery Theatre
San Andreas Highway Patrol Pursuit- GTA SA
*NOTE: I HAD PANDORA RADIO RUNNING IN THE BACKGROUND. COMMENT AND TELL ME IF YOU WANT ME TO CONTINUE MY PURSUIT VIDEOS WITH MUSIC OR NOT* A female SAHP officer tries to pull over a white vehicle when a convertible with 2 men races by, clipping the front of the patrol vehicle. A pursuit of the vehicle ensues, in which the convertible strikes many pedestrian vehicles. After just over a minute into the chase, the suspects lose control and fly head first into the San Fierro Bay. The SAHP officer then decides to try and rescue at least one of the suspects and dives in, ultimately dragging the man to safety. Sadly, the passenger drifted to the bottom of the bay with the vehicle, later to be recovered by SAHP divers. car(credits to makers in DL): gtapolicemods.com vehicle.txd: gtapolicemods.com