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Record Store Day is an important day for the music community. A celebration for the record stores that are still alive and kicking. After all, the music industry is certainly on its rebound. In fact, this year's vinyl record sales are at their highest since 1997.
The participating record stores for Tampa this year included Seminole Heights' Microgroove and North Tampa's Mojo Books and Music.
Mojo celebrated with free, live music from several local bands, photographed below:
Record Store Day, a day vinyl collectors, and music fanatics a-like all gather together at their local independent record store to listen to great music and buy rare releases of bands celebrating the occasion. Celebrated the third Saturday in April, this years record store day marked the 6th annual celebration of Record Store Day. This year I spent my RSD at the local Tampa record store Microgroove. In addition to the obvious RSD releases, Microgroove had a wonderful line-up of some great local artists, including DieAlps!, Empire Cinema, Morphic Lapse, and Permanent Makeup.
DieAlps! kicked off the party with a solid and enjoyable set, full of indie pop and plenty of spunk. The Tampa based 5 piece, led by husband and wife, Frank and Cornelia Clacaterra, have a very likable and pop-filled “waltz” style sound, and a vocal delivery reminiscent of Joanna Newsome. They were a joy to watch from beginning to end and the whole band seemed very comfortable and professional on stage and had a great live sound. DieAlps! is currently working on an EP set to be released during the summer of 2013.
Empire Cinema followed with a great set, playing tracks off their first EP as well as their just released second EP entitled Esse Quam Videri. Empire Cinema, have a very unique sound drawing influence from such bands as Modest Mouse, Death Cab for Cutie, and Joy Division. They opened with the track Intro/Start From Scratch off their 2012 EP, and didn’t slow down the entire set. Front man Brendon Hock gave a very passionate and entertaining performance, dancing throughout.
After the end of Empire Cinema’s set, the room kind of died down while the next band, Morphic Lapse, set up their equipment. The most shocking band of the line up, Morphic Lapse burst into their fast and furious set to a crowd of maybe 5 or 6 people. As they continued, more people began to pour into the room and by the end of the show they were playing to about 15 to 20 people. Having never heard the band before, I was quite surprised when the band opened with a very fast, very loud, very heavy 10-15 second song. Screeching to the point of exhaustion, the singer (whose name I didn’t catch and can’t find anywhere) spent half the set on his knees screaming and putting in more emotion than any band I have seen in a long time. Morphic Lapse sounds like a grindcore band, but I can’t say for sure what genre they actually fall under, but they are certainly an entertaining and talented group of passionate musicians.
Permanent Makeup was the last artist of the day, and proved why they are currently signed to Microgroove owner Keith Ulrey’s label New Granada Records. They have a very DIY punk sound, that has a loud and driving sound that captures you in a way you would not expect. Drawing influences from bands like Fugazi, and maybe even The Pixies, Permanent Makeup put on a fast, loud, and extremely energetic performance that left me wanting to hear more. I could have listened to these guys for easily other 30 minutes to an hour. Their new album entitled The Void…It Creeps was released in February, and is worth listening to over and over. I was able to pick up a copy of the LP while at RSD and it was worth every penny.
The third Saturday of April is a day that brings excitement to fans of an older format of music and a celebration of the art of music, both old and new. Record Store Day was conceived in 2007 at a meeting of independent record storeowners and employees as a way of celebrating the music and the culture surrounding it. Metallica, the first ambassador, officially kicked off the first Record Store Day at Rasputin Music in San Francisco on April 19th, 2008. It has since seen the likes of Ozzy Osbourne, Joshua Homme, Ozzy Osbourne (again), and Iggy Pop. This year the ambassador will be Jack White of the White Stripes.
What makes Record Store Day unique is that all participating stores carry limited and exclusive CDs and vinyl along with other promotional materials that are released in celebration of Record Store Day. It is celebrated globally with hundreds of artists and bands making appearances and performances, as well a chance to meet and greet their fans. One of this year’s exclusive RSD releases will be the ten-year anniversary of the White Stripes album Elephant and will be rereleased in special black, red, and white record. In local Tampa news, Mojo’s Books and Music will celebrate Record Store Day with a hometown show from Pitchfork-approved punk band Merchandise, as well as a full line up on April 20. Microgroove in Seminole Heights will also have special record releases, free drinks and free local music all day.
Some of the artists to look forward to that have releases on Record Store Day this year include: A Place to Bury Strangers, All That Remains, The Animals, Avenged Sevenfold, The Band, Billy Bragg, Biffy Clyro, Bob Dylan, Bon Jovi, Brian Jonestown Massacre, Buddy Guy, Coheed and Cambria, Country Joe and the Fish, Cream, the Cure, David Bowie, Dio, the Fall, Frank Turner, Gary Clark Jr., The Gaslight Anthem, The Notorious B.I.G., Willie Nelson, ZZ Ward, and Pink Floyd. Record Store Day is a throwback to not only the music record stores helped launch, but also to the cultures/subculture it has helped create even to this day.
Tampa Bay independent record stores celebrated the fifth annual Record Store Day on April 21. Mojo Books & Music, just minutes from the University of South Florida on Fowler Avenue, celebrated with an all-day band lineup, a vegan bake-sale and more.
Record Store Day is a day for independently owned record stores, music artists and music lovers to come together to celebrate the art of music. Stores put on events for the day, musicians release limited edition vinyls and fans revel in new music and physical purchases. It celebrates “brick and mortar” stores and introduces people to a culture almost lost in the age of iTunes and Amazon.
My weekend kicked off on Thursday, catching some great surf and psychedelic rock bands in Ybor.
Soon after, I geared up for Record Store Day. Looking through the lists of rare and live releases, I planned out what I wanted to get. Then I promptly forgot all of it and met a bunch of awesome people along the way.
Fighting off a cold, I was not one of the first people in line. Showing up in Seminole Heights’ new Microgroove in the early afternoon, the storefront was buzzing with people meticulously searching through the vinyl offerings.
Wednesday 4/18:
MARGOT AND THE NUCLEAR SO & SO'S w/ EZRA FURMAN, WRITER & SLEEPY VIKINGS
http://www.facebook.com/events/268175086608182/
Henry Rollins is a controversial man of all trades. After becoming the lead singer of acclaimed punk band Black Flag, and having several guest performances on Californication and Sons of Anarchy, Rollins has also cultivated a strong background in spoken word. Not that they should solely be judged as a poetic performances, Rollins' catharsis sits comfortably between Patton Oswalt and Jello Biafra. Speaking about his personal life, traveling around the world, charity work and getting shot on Sons of Anarchy, Henry Rollins fills in Bulls Radio on his Long March.
Emily Turner, a sophomore accounting and economics dual major, is not a stranger to cancer. Her grandfather just passed away from cancer in November 2012, her grandmother died of cancer in 2010 and her aunt is a breast cancer survivor. This is why Turner is so passionate about her Relay for Life team, the Bulls Business Community. As the advertising chair on the Business Living Learning Community’s community service committee, Turner and her team have raised $2,014.35 so far, putting the team in fourth place among all 87 USF Relay for Life teams. The team’s total fundraising goal is…
A new program in the College of Education, brought to USF by doctorate student Amanda Loyden and professor Gladis Kersaint, will focus on training students to become effective middle school-age teachers in science and mathematics, concentrating on students in grades 5 to 9. In an informational session held in the College of Education Building TECO conference room, Loyden led students through the stages of the program, which revolve around the “STEM” (Science, Technology, Engineering and Mathematics) model of education.
Student activists across campus began protesting April 8 and will until April 12 in an “Empty Holster” demonstration, lobbying for the right of those with concealed weapons permits to carry their weapons on campus, or “concealed-carry.” Students involved in an “empty holster” protest typically wear an empty gun holster on their person to symbolize a weapon they would otherwise not have to defend themselves. They are also invited to hand out fliers and literature to interested students and speak with them about the issue. Student protester Eric Blake stood next to the movement’s display table at the April 10 Bull Market, along…
Students waited in line for as long as five hours inside and outside the Marshall Student Center on April 9. Most sat on the ground, some brought food and others stood for hours. They were waiting for “A Night with John Legend,” a University Lecture Series event part of USF Week. When the doors finally opened and Legend took the stage, he focused 30 minutes of his presentation on education inequality and how to fix it. “Many of you overcame significant obstacles to get here today,” he said. “I think you know why you’re here: because you know it’s going…