Category: vinyl

Murray Gershenz’s 300,000-plus record collection is no bestseller

Music Man Murray Gershenz
Murray Gershenz has spent nearly three quarters of a century collecting the albums that fill the dusty wooden shelves of his two-story West Adams record shop. From opera classics to big band, country western, jazz, R&B and rock, Gershenz has lived up to his business credo, “You name it, we find it.”

The problem is he can’t rid himself of it. For the last three years, the 89-year-old has been trying to sell the entire collection, more than 300,000 records, to one lucky bidder. Gershenz’s attorney said a conservative estimate places the value of the collection at $1.5 million; an average of $5 a record despite the amount of rare items he boasts, including original Edison cylinder recordings.

“Every month or so there is somebody who’s interested. But there’s never anybody who’s really interested,” Gershenz says from behind a desk piled with records he’s preparing to ship. “People are biting. But nobody seems to have the money, the place to put them, or knows what in the hell to do with over a quarter million records.”

Gershenz’s struggle to sell is the subject of an upcoming film, “Music Man Murray,” which aired Saturday, national Record Store Day, on the Documentary Channel and NPR's “All Songs Considered.”
Although most octogenarians have long settled into retirement, Gershenz would like to dedicate himself full time to his second career, acting. Having enjoyed bit parts as a character actor in film (“Smashed,” “The Hangover,” “I Love You, Man”) and television (“NCIS: Los Angeles,” “House,” “Parks and Recreation”), he says the burden of the store keeps him from pursuing more auditions.

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Record Store Day booty: Flaming Lips, Lee Hazlewood, Dinosaur Jr.

On Record Store Day 2012, Times pop music critic Randall Roberts waited in the line at Vacation Vinyl to score music by Flaming Lips, Dinosaur Jr., Lee Hazlewood, Circle and others
The lines were long, the heat was rough, the music-geek quotient off the charts, but one thing made it all worthwhile in the end: the booty. That is, the limited-edition vinyl that has become the hallmark of Record Store Day, the annual celebration of independent record retailers and the music they sell that occurred on Saturday in the U.S. and Britain.

In my case, said loot was made up of the new Flaming Lips double LP, "Flaming Lips & Heady Fwends," which features, among others, Erykah Badu, Bon Iver, Kesha, Chris Martin and Lightning Bolt; the double-LP teaser of Lee Hazlewood's 1968-71 work, "The LH1 Years: Singles, Nudes & Backsides"; "The Electronic Anthology Project of Dinosaur Jr.," which is exactly what it purports to be; a 7-inch single of the Carolina Chocolate Drops doing Run DMC's "You Be Illin'"; and an album by surreal Finnish metal band Circle, called "Manner." (Alas, I missed out on essential releases from Feist/Mastodon, Lee Perry and Peter Tosh, among others.)

In Los Angeles, the frenzy was focused on three different stores along Sunset Boulevard: Amoeba Music in Hollywood, Vacation Vinyl in Silver Lake, and Origami in Echo Park. I opted for Vacation, the little store across from Sunset Junction that is owned by the dudes who run Hydra Head Records. At 10 a.m., when the doors opened, the queue extended down Sunset and around a corner.

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Stones Throw's 11-11-11 event to spin 1,100 records in one night

Pb wolf1
Numerology must be a really big deal in Peanut Butter Wolf's universe. How else do you explain the desire to play 1,100 records (literally a U-Haul's worth of wax) in a single night?

On Nov. 11 (get it, 11-11-11?), the fedora-wearing founder of Stones Throw Records (born Chris Manak) is hosting a party in honor of numerical symmetry with a one-night-only event maestroed by 11 DJs for 11 straight hours at the Eagle Rock Center for the Arts. And by the way,  that U-Haul's worth of records we just mentioned are all coming from his private collection of "favorite records" from a mixed bag of genres. And of course, in keeping with the theme of the night, it's even $11 to get in.

Spanning from 6 p.m. to 1 a.m., this ultimate test of dance floor endurance is the latest and most impressive episode in the DJ/ label boss' ongoing numbers fetish. But considering the kind of talent he's brought with him in the past, by no means are we complaining.

Since 2006, Stones Throw  has turned the day when all of the numbers on the calendar align into an excuse to hold a crate-digging marathon party session. Historically, each year has brought us a different theme, from goth and heavy metal music on 6-6-06, to Peanut Butter Wolf's nine-day string of L.A. and Orange County DJ gigs for 9-9-09. Last year, 10-10-10 resulted in another one-night only party in Downtown L.A. where a roster of 10 DJs, including Madlib, J. Rocc and Prince Paul, spun nothing but 45s for 10 hours straight.

A lineup of DJs for 11-11-11 has yet to be announced, though we're told that Peanut Butter Wolf won't be spinning the records this time, just hosting. Although it seems inevitable that with an arsenal of exactly 1,100 records to get through, he might have to pinch hit when one of his DJs eventually falls down from exhaustion. 

ALSO:

Peanut Butter Wolf talks about Stones Throw's new direct-to-disc live series

MED dips into his private sonic stash on new Stones Throw record

Sunday: 'Psych Funk Sa-Re-Ga' free listening party today at Palate in Glendale

-- Nate Jackson

Photo: Peanut Butter Wolf  Credit: Jake Green

This yard sale is all vinyl records, all weekend long

Vinyl records are record collector Tom Justice’s only wares at his weekly yard sale in L.A. He passes along his love and knowledge of music whenever he can.

Vinyl records are record collector Tom Justice’s only wares at his weekly yard sale in L.A. He passes along his love and knowledge of music whenever he can.
On weekend mornings, just off the corner of El Paso Drive and Cleland Avenue near Highland Park, 67-year-old former organizational consultant Tom Justice wakes up to make a cup of coffee and schlep cardboard frozen-food boxes holding about 8,000 vinyl records out of his garage and onto the concrete driveway along the side of his house. It's a relaxed, kind of messy shop he has set up — some of the LP jackets are dusty and warped from years of use and some overnights outside, him in a worn Grambling State University sweat shirt, beanie hat and blue jeans with a scruffy white-stubbled face and crooked smile — that holds the promise of treasures.

For the last seven months, this is how Justice spends his weekends, selling albums for good prices, usually just $2 to $10 a pop, from 11 in the morning to 7 on Saturdays and noon to 4:30 on Sundays. A day or two in advance, he sends out a weekly open email to a list of a couple hundred “Vinyl Aficionados,” as he calls them, or “Vinyl Brethren” or sometimes “Exclusive members of the Mt. Washington Vinyl Country Club,” mentioning deals and new finds for the upcoming weekend. Usually this notice will have a few people casually waiting around before the sale starts Saturday mornings, looking to “get some of the good stuff,” said Justice. That might include anything from “two ultra clean” copies of Michael Jackson's “Thriller” to “the super rare oldies LP ‘The Crystals Sing the Greatest Hits,’” as it did last weekend. In an average weekend he'll sell a few hundred albums, he said.

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Sunset Strip Business Assn. to host record swap

Record_swap More than 100,000 records from the '60s, '70s and '80s will be at the disposal of music aficionados hoping to score the missing pieces to their vinyl collection on Saturday when the Sunset Strip Business Assn. hosts a record swap.

Record Collector News and KLOS-FM (95.5) partnered with the association for the event, which is set to have 40 vendors, including Amoeba, Rockaway Records, Record Surplus, Headline Records, Hollywood Book & Poster and Burger Records.

The Record Swap starts at noon at LIVE! On Sunset, the former home of Tower Records.

Early-bird admission is $15, or $10 with a donated canned good. Admission is free after 2 p.m.

RELATED:

Sunset Strip Music Festival renovates one of L.A.'s classic rock addresses

Mötley Crüe, Public Enemy, Matt & Kim, Bush to headline Sunset Strip Music Festival

-- Gerrick D. Kennedy
Twitter.com/GerrickKennedy

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