Record Store Day – Independent Record Stores in Perth and 10 Albums that changed my life

Noise Pollution Records - vinyl collection
Last year at the Revelation Film Festival I saw the documentary Sound it Out which was about the very last surviving record shop in Teesside, North East England. It showed the meaning of shop to their customers and the role music plays in people’s lives. This documentary made me feel very nostalgic, I could really relate to it. I have been a huge record nerd for a large part of my life (disclaimer: when I say records I mean the CD version, I don’t have a vinyl player). I used to spend hours after uni and on weekends hanging out at independent record stores in the city. I loved browsing the shelves, seeking new music and listening to artists on the listening stations before deciding to buy. I became one of those regular customers where the dudes behind the counter would recommend me CDs and save CDs for me to listen to when I came in. I have discovered so many great bands through my experiences in record stores. It’s strange to think that nowadays people grow up without this experience and are just downloading music online instead. 

Plastic Passion - vinyl collection
On Saturday 21 April 2012 it’s Record Store Day, and I encourage everyone to go out and support their local independent record store.

Is there any point in buying a CD nowadays when you can just go online and download anything you want, and play in on a portable media player?

I like the experience of shifting through my CD collection and picking up individual CDs, opening them up and deciding whether or not I want to listen to it. Each CD also comes with a memory, where I can usually remember at what point of my life I bought it, some have stories of battle wounds I have suffered to get it (ie: the hunt high and low at various record stores to collect the back catalogue of bands and waking up at insane hours in the morning to bid for rare CDs on eBay), the wear and tear on the case and scratches on the CD reveal how much I have listened to it and where I have taken it. I have a connection to my CDs that I wouldn’t have if they were all just a bunch of files on my computer. But then again, I am of the generation where people started their music journey buying cassette tapes and then CDs, so buying CDs at record stores has formed a major part of my experience and appreciation of music. I used to get excited when I received a postcard from 78 Records informing me that a CD I had ordered had come in and was ready for pick up. When an album was released, I’d make the journey to the record store to buy it. A digital download doesn’t compare to the feeling that you get when you have a physical copy of the album in your hand, to see all the artwork and unfold the booklet to read the liner notes.

I feel like it’s the same thing with cookbooks. Cookbook sales are declining, many are loving the ease and convenience of downloading books/recipes on their iPad but to me it’s not the same as having a physical cookbook which you can flick through and read for ideas and inspiration, flag recipes to try and find your favourite recipes with the pages stuck together with food stains. 

DaDa Records - CD collection

Here is a list of the independent records stores in Perth and Fremantle to check out on Record Store Day, and if you continue reading, you can read about the 10 albums that have changed my life.

(I asked for permission before taking any photos at the records stores and everyone was very cool about it.)

[Note: List of record stores updated on 18.4.2013 with two more added - Planet Music and Safari's Record Shack]

78 Records (914 Hay Street, Perth)

(Relocated - Upstairs at 255 Murray St Mall)


78 Records entry
78s was the record store that I used to frequent the most, almost weekly throughout my uni days. The staff were always good to me and have recommended a lot of great bands. 78s was a huge space back in the day and there was an upstairs part as well where bands would play live. Now it has being downsized, the collection isn’t as extensive but there’s still a reasonable range and a good place to order in CDS that you can’t find anywhere else.

78 Records

 

DaDa Records (36 Pier Street, Perth)

DaDa Records
DaDa Records entry
DaDas is like a treasure trove, it’s the kind of store you could spend hours in, digging through their collection which is overflowing on the shelves. It has an extensive range of vinyl and CDs, where you can find stuff from lesser known, more obscure acts. It always amazes me how they keep track of everything as they don’t have a computerized system, there are towers of CDs everywhere behind the counter and when you make a purchase, your sale is scribbled down on a notepad. From time to time, Dadas holds gigs in its garage behind the store.

DaDa Records - vinyl collection
DaDa Records - basement counter
DaDa Records - basement of CDs
DaDa Records - CD collection

 

Fat Shan Records  (37 Barrack Street, Perth)

Fat Shan Records - enter through telephone box
A new kid on the block which has only been open for about a year, located in a basement, mainly selling vinyl with a section of CDs dedicated to local artists. Fat Shan is a great supporter of local music and regularly hosts gigs, and provides a jamming and recording space for bands. They also have a section of vintage out the back. This store is the prettiest, it feels like you are down into someone’s lounge room, it has a really comfortable and intimate vibe, and lots of fairy lights.

Fat Shan Records - local CD collection
Fat Shan Records - vinyl
Fat Shan Records - vinyl collection

Noise Pollution Records (280 William Street, Northbridge)

Noise Pollution Records
Noise Pollution Records - the whole store
Another newish record store that has been opened a little over a year on the refurbished William Street precinct, sandwiched between independent retailers and vintage stores, Noise Pollution Records sells a great selection of secondhand and new vinyl, and specialises in collectible, import and hard to find LPs. It’s a small store but there is a lot packed in. I like how the place is decked out with memorabilia and posters on the walls, it feels like you have walked into some record collector’s bedroom. There is also a little sub-store called Strummers Guitars out the back which sells a range of second-hand guitars, as well pedals and provides guitar repairs.

Noise Pollution Records - vinyl and guitar section
Noise Pollution Records - wall of vinyl

Plastic Passion  (43 Eigth Avenue, Maylands)

Plastic Passion entry
A cool little record store out in the inner city suburb of Maylands with a lot of quality second hand stuff so there is a range of interesting and diverse vinyl and CDs to shift through. You are more likely to find older stuff here than newer stuff, and the pricing for a lot of the items is also at the lower end of the scale so you will be sure to get a bargain.

Plastic Passion - vinyl and CDs
Plastic Passion - vinyl collection

Mills Records (22 Adelaide Street, Fremantle)

Mills Records entry
Fremantle is a bit of a trek for me but this is the record store I check out if I’m ever in Fremantle. Downstairs at Mills Records you’ll find CD and DVDs, and upstairs you’ll find tshirts and vinyl.

Mills Records - CDs and DVDs collection
Mills Records - upstairs vinyl collection + FotoFreo exhibition
(When I took this photo, the FotoFreo 2012 exhibition was on and the walls upstairs at Mills Records had photos from Bronwen Woodward's ‘Dead Air Therapy’ exhibition)

Mills Records - record players

Junction Records  (27-35 William Street, Fremantle)

Junction Records entry
Hidden away from the main streets of Fremantle and situated in the intersection of two arcades, Junction Records is the rebranded CD Library where you can trade in your CDs and find a great range of new and second hand CDs. You can also get a membership to the store to get further discounts on items.

Junction Records - vinyl and CDs
Junction Records CDs

The Record Finder (87 High Street, Fremantle)

The Record Finder entry
The Record Finder - the whole store

This store has an old school feel to it, like someone’s dusty old basement with a secret stash of records. The Record Finder is packed wall to wall with all sorts of paraphernalia, books, vinyl, CDs and cassettes! Just in case you still drive a car from the 80s and only have a tape deck. A lot of the stuff is pre-1990 too so it’s a place to go to if you are after an old hard to find record.

The Record Finder - wall of vinyl
The Record Finder - vinyl collection

Planet Music (634-646 Beaufort Street, Mount Lawley)

Planet Music - Record Store
Planet Video is a Perth institution, a place that stocks every movie you could image, with sections like cult and festival, it’s not your average video store. The Planet Video that I grew up frequenting religiously on a Friday night was on the corner of Walcott and Beaufort Street, but it has moved a few doors down and redeveloped into a little empire with movie rentals as well as a bookshop, café and record store.

The record store is located upstairs. Planet Music offers an eclectic mix of CDs, vinyl, t-shirts, posters and books. With Planet Video, Planet Music, Planet Books and Daily Planet all interconnected, you can pretty much loose yourself there.

Planet Music - vinyl section
Planet Music CDs section

Safari's Record Shack (Rear Shop 3 Arcade 189 William Street, Northbridge)

Enter the Safari!
Another new little record store in Perth located out the back of Beans and Bunches florist in an arcade on William Street. I almost missed it the first time I tried to find it. Look carefully around the florist and you’ll see a hallway, and the sounds of groovy tunes will lure you in. The record collection is more psychedelic, funk, soul and jazz, and you’ll also find some classics. The store is decked out in a way that makes you feel like you are entering into some tropical paradise. I like the vibe of this place and the collection is small enough so that you can flick through it all.

Safari's Record Shack

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Working at a record store – Funky Beats 

Growing up I always dreamt of working at a record store one day and I got my chance in 2004 when I saw a job advertised on Seek for Funky Beats, a little CD stall at the Malaga Markets. I was hired after my overenthusiastic interview performance and worked there between 2004-2005 on the weekends until the owner sold it. Funky Beats specialized in selling second hand CDs which the owner would source and I would spend my shifts cleaning up the scratches with a special machine and putting the CDs into new cases. There was a small selection of new CDs, mainly those that were on the charts, and a lot of R&B and hip hop. As it was at the Malaga Markets, the clientele were mainly families that were doing their fruit and vegetable shopping on the weekend. It had it’s moments though, like when a guy would came into the stall and buy a second hand Metallica CD for himself and the new Avril Lavigne CD single for his daughter while his wife was doing the food shopping.

At Funky Beats I found a whole pile of CDs the owner was selling in the $2 bin, they were all these alternative, not very well known bands. The owner had acquired all the leftover stock from Subterranean Records (which used to be where Fat Shan Records is now) when they closed down. It was a bit of a goldmine but the owner didn’t realize it and no one else who came into the Malaga Markets would ever appreciate any of it. But I knew what to do with it, I started listing everything on eBay during my shifts and a CD which was in the $2 bin would sell for at least $10 online and up to $30, and sometimes even more. It was fun going through the CDs, researching and identifying the ones that were worth listing on eBay and writing a description that would interest people. So my music nerdism became a valuable job qualification, who else would have understood the value of eBay for music obsessives? The owner was quite impressed with my ability to significantly increase profits at the stall via eBay.
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10 Albums That Changed My Life


Music was my first major passion in life but nowadays food and blogging has taken over. I’m much less active in discovering music the way that I used to during high school and uni, instead I spend a lot of my spare time learning to cook new things, reading cookbooks and blogs. As with music, I feel that cooking allows me to be creative and express myself. I still buy CDs but not as much as I used to, and I still go out to see gigs but not as often.

I had a pretty strict Asian upbringing, I rarely went out and had curfews when I did. My parents were very education oriented so I was a major study nerd, quiet and shy. I think this kind of life would not be unfamiliar with a lot of Asians growing up in Australia. But somewhere along the way I found my refuge in music, it was escapism.

Growing up with parents from a non-English speaking background (well mum can’t speak English and my dad speaks English but sometimes he gets his words mixed up, like the time he wrote a note for my brother to take the rubbish out and he wrote rabbit instead of rubbish), I wasn’t exposed to music until I was a teenager, unlike friends that I would meet later on in life, I couldn’t say that I grew up with my dad’s cool record collection.

Correcting my dad's note - rabbit vs rubbish

I got a walkman for Christmas when I was in year 7 and I mostly listened to the commercial radio stations, it wasn’t until I discovered alternative music in year 9 that my life changed. Music has really defined me as a person, it’s contributed to my self discovery and played a major part in shaping my life and the person that I am today. So here I share 10 albums that have changed my life.

1.    Veruca Salt – Eight Arms to Hold You


Veruca Salt was the beginning of everything. Their second album Eight Arms to Hold You was the first alternative rock album that I bought. Before Veruca Salt, I was just listening to the usual top 40 pop charts, mainly a lot of R&B…then one day on Rage I saw the video clip for the song ‘Volcano Girls’ and I thought that it was the coolest thing ever – girls rocking out with guitars, jumping up and down, and going nuts. I wanted to be just like them. So pretty much from that moment onwards, I started getting into alternative rock music, switching over from the commercial radio stations to Triple J.

I was in year 9 at this point of time, I was one of those super studious shy Asian types and I had a horrible haircut that only an Asian mother can give (sorry mum, but the best decision that I ever made was to save enough pocket money to get a real haircut). I wrote in big letters VERUCA SALT ROCKS! in a black marker across my pencil case (as you do when you are a teenager). One day, one of the bogans in my class pointed at my pencil case and asked me if I liked Veruca Salt. So why did this matter to him? Because the album Eight Arms to Hold You by Veruca Salt was produced by Bob Rock who produced Metallica’s Black album. This was Metallica’s breakthrough album in that it brought them to the attention of the mainstream and also their most well-known hit ‘Enter Sandman’ as well as other songs like ‘The Unforgiven’, ‘Nothing Else Matters’. So I became a super nerdy Asian girl who had just a little bit of rock credibility.

So this is the story of how rock’n’roll saved my life – super shy nerdy Asian girl minimizes bullying potential as she had Metallica by her side, well I’ve never owned a Metallica album but that doesn’t matter because VERUCA SALT ROCKS! \m/

When I was about 18 and had saved enough money I bought a red SG, a guitar just like the one used by Veruca Salt, except that it was the cheaper Epiphone version and not a Gibson. I guess anyone who starts playing guitar would have some sort of dream of playing in a band one day but I seriously never thought that it would become a reality. However, when I was 20 and going to gigs a lot, often on my own, I befriended some girls who had similar music tastes (specifically a local Perth band called The Tigers) and we become Trash Band 1987, inflicting incoherent noise on the Perth music scene from 2003-2006.

If you click on image above, hopefully it will be large enough for you to read the Trash Band 1987 bio, published in the zine First Past the Post
My attempt at a collage - TB87 photos from the archives

A sign that we made it! TB87 sticker on the 78 Records catalogue computer. Photo taken on 30 March 2012 and yes the computer still works.

Suffice to say, I owe a lot in my life to the song ‘Volcano Girls’ by Veruca Salt, watch the video clip here –

Don Caballero - Unresolved Kharma

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