Posts Tagged ‘Indie Store’

Hoodlums Top 99 Vinyl Titles of 2011

Tuesday, January 3rd, 2012

Hey vinyl lovers, check out Hoodlums’ best-selling vinyl titles from 2011.

We think it’s a pretty cool list of stuff, and we are really proud of (and thankful to) our great customers for buying such quality art from their local hoods.  Like the Top-selling CDs of 2011 List, this one is loaded with a diverse group of titles (I love to see the differences and similarities between the two configurations).  If you are a fan of the art, there’s probably something on here you need to add to your collection.

As you can see from the numbers, CD still outsells vinyl… but we are still selling more vinyl all the time (especially as more titles hit the market).

Note: RSD means the title is from Record Store Day or Indie Black Friday.

Hoodlums Top 99 Vinyl Titles of 2011

  1. Mumford and Sons – Sigh No More
  2. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues
  3. Bruce Springsteen – Gotta Get That Feeling (RSD)
  4. Black Keys – El Camino (one of the only stores in the US to get a bunch)
  5. White Stripes – Let’s Shake Hands (RSD)
  6. Beatles – Abbey Road (amazingly, the only Beatles LP available)
  7. Bon Iver – Bon Iver
  8. Roger Clyne & Peacemakers – Unida Cantina (in-store performance)
  9. Rolling Stones – Brown Sugar/Bitch (RSD)
  10. Mumford and Sons – Dharohar Project  (RSD)
  11. White Stripes – LaFayette Blues (RSD)
  12. Miles Davis – Kind of Blue
  13. Foo Fighters – Medium Rare (RSD)
  14. Wilco – Whole Love
  15. Ryan Adams – Ashes and Fire
  16. Bob Dylan – Bob Dylan in Concert
  17. Doors – Riders on the Storm (RSD)
  18. Kings of Leon – Holy Roller Novocaine (RSD)
  19. Red Hot Chili Peppers – Havana Affair (RSD)
  20. Tom Waits – Bad As Me
  21. Tom Petty – Kiss My Amps
  22. Black Keys – Brothers
  23. Decemberists – King is Dead
  24. Clash – London Calling
  25. Florence & The Machine – Lungs
  26. Radiohead – OK Computer
  27. Black Keys – Lonely Boy (RSD)
  28. Beatles – Singles (RSD)
  29. Ray LaMontagne – Live Fall (RSD)
  30. Iron & Wine – Kiss Each Other
  31. Bon Iver – For Emma
  32. Radiohead – King of Limbs
  33. Radiohead – In Rainbows
  34. Adele – 21
  35. Wu-Tang Clan – Enter Wu-Tang
  36. Black Angels – Another Nice Pair (RSD)
  37. Beach Boys – Pet Sounds
  38. Bright Eyes – I’m Wide Awake It’s Morning
  39. Pixies – Doolittle
  40. Neutral Milk Hotel – In the Aeroplane Over The Sea
  41. What Laura Says – Talk
  42. Regina Spektor – Four from Far (RSD)
  43. Sharon Jones & Dapkings – Soul Time (RSD)
  44. Social Distortion – Hard Times & Nursery Rhymes
  45. Black Keys – Magic Potion
  46. Strokes – Is This It?
  47. Godspeed You Black Emperor – F#A# (infinity)
  48. Perfect Circle – Thirteenth Step
  49. Strokes – Angles
  50. Jimi Hendrix – Are You Experienced?
  51. Foo Fighters – Wasting Light
  52. John Coltrane – Love Supreme
  53. Built to Spill – Ripple
  54. Rush – Caravan Blues (RSD)
  55. Shins – Oh! Inverted World
  56. Fleet Foxes – Fleet Foxes
  57. Amy Winehouse – Back to Black
  58. TV on the Radio – Nine Types of Light
  59. Tool – Opiate
  60. Pixies – Surfer Rosa
  61. She & Him – Volume one
  62. Elliot Smith – Either/Or
  63. Pearl Jam – Vs.
  64. Nas – Illmatic
  65. Black Angels – Phosgene Nightmare
  66. Mayall/Clapton – Lonely Years (RSD)
  67. Beach Boys – Good Vibrations (RSD)
  68. Sonic Youth – Oz Tour 1993 (RSD)
  69. Lady Gaga – Born This Way (RSD)
  70. Velvet Underground – Loaded
  71. Black Keys – Thickfreakness
  72. Ryan Adams – Gold
  73. Tool – Undertow
  74. Flaming Lips – In a Priest-Driven Ambulance
  75. Cursive – Ugly Organ
  76. Arcade Fire – Suburbs
  77. Guns N’ Roses – Appetite for Destruction
  78. Radiohead – Kid A
  79. Radiohead – Bends
  80. Jason Isbell & 400 Unit – Here We Rest
  81. Ryan Adams – Heartbreaker
  82. Johnny Cash – American VI: Ain’t No Grave
  83. Junior Kimbrough – All Night Long
  84. O’ Brother Where Art Thou? Soundtrack
  85. Bad Brains – Pay to Cum
  86. John Lennon – Imagine 40th Anniversary box (RSD)
  87. Soundgarden – Before the Doors Live (RSD)
  88. Phish – Party Time? (RSD)
  89. Dream Theater – Metropolis 2 (RSD)
  90. Gil Scott-Heron – The Revolution Will Not Be Televised
  91. Air – Moon Safari
  92. Tom Waits – Swordfishtrombones
  93. Bob Dylan – Highway 61 Revisited
  94. Tom Waits  – Heart of Saturday Night
  95. White Stripes – White Blood Cells
  96. Iron & Wine – Creek Drank the Cradle
  97. Shins – Chutes Too Narrow
  98. Beach Boys – Smile Session
  99. Whiskeytown – Stranger’s Almanac (8 copies!)

(RSD) = Record Store Day or Indie Black Friday

 

Hoodlums Top 99 CDs of 2011

Monday, January 2nd, 2012

Contrary to media-fueled misconception, people are still buying lots of CDs (and LPs). In fact, 2011 was a good year for Hoodlums (and music in general). Of course, we thank all of you for buying so many of your CDs (and LPs) here.

Wanna take a look at what you bought? Let’s do it. As a store owner, I’m pretty proud of you guys. That’s a solid list of quality music (as is the Top-selling Vinyl List) and you should be proud of your taste and diversity.

What influences the chart? In addition to noted in-store performances, I’ve included a little “legend” of a few of the notable influences, namely the opinions of the hoodlums at Hoodlums (click here for our Top 10 of 2011 lists), at the bottom.

Hoodlums Top 99 CDs of 2011

  1. Roger Clyne & The Peacemakers – Unida Cantina (in-store performance)
  2. Adele – 21
  3. Decemberists – King is Dead (S, K)
  4. Black Keys – El Camino (S)
  5. Mumford and Sons – Sigh No More
  6. Abigail Washburn – City of Refuge (in-store performance, K)
  7. Ryan Adams – Ashes and Fire (A, K)
  8. Tom Waits – Bad As Me
  9. Black Keys – Brothers
  10. Foo Fighters – Wasting Light
  11. Wilco – Whole Love
  12. Fleet Foxes – Helplessness Blues
  13. Danger Mouse/Daniele Luppi – Rome (S)
  14. Bon Iver – Bon Iver
  15. Jason Isbell and 400 Unit – Here We Rest (A, S, K)
  16. Gillian Welch – Harrow and the Harvest (K)
  17. Social Distortion – Hard Times and Nursery Rhymes (A)
  18. Radiohead – King of Limbs
  19. Florence & the Machine – Lungs
  20. Dawes – Nothing Is Wrong (A)
  21. Cake – Showroom of Compassion
  22. Paul Simon – So Beautiful or So What
  23. Sarah Jarosz – Follow Me Down (K)
  24. Ma/Duncan/Meyer/Thile – Goat Rodeo Sessions (K)
  25. Iron & Wine – Kiss Each Other Clean
  26. My Morning Jacket – Circuital
  27. Tedeschi/Trucks – Revelator
  28. Fitz & The Tantrums – Pickin’ Up the Pieces
  29. Amos Lee – Mission Bell
  30. Florence & The Machine – Ceremonials
  31. Foster the People – Torches
  32. Civil Wars – Barton Hollow
  33. Chris Isaak – Beyond the Sun
  34. REM – Collapse Into Now
  35. M83 – Hurry Up We’re Dreaming
  36. Adele – 19
  37. Small Leaks Sink Ships – Oak Street Basement (in-store performance)
  38. Gregg Allman – Low Country Blues
  39. Charles Bradley – No Time for Dreaming (S)
  40. Death Cab for Cutie – Codes and Keys
  41. Neil Young – Treasure
  42. Flogging Molly – Speed of Darkness
  43. Bright Eyes – People’s Key
  44. Primus – Green Naugahyde
  45. She & Him – Very She & Him Christmas (in a post… who knew?)
  46. Red Hot Chili Peppers – I’m With You
  47. Amy Winehouse – Lioness: Hidden Treasures
  48. Bill Evans – Piano Player
  49. Daptone Gold – Various Artists
  50. Beastie Boys – Hot Sauce Committee
  51. Ben Harper – Give Till It’s Gone
  52. Edward Sharpe & Magnetic Zeros – Up From Below
  53. Arctic Monkeys – Suck It and See
  54. Bruno Mars – Doo Wops & Hooligans
  55. John Hiatt – Dirty Jeans and Mudslide Hymns
  56. Drive-By Truckers – Go Go Boots
  57. Kooper/Bloomfield – Fillmore East: Lost Tapes
  58. Strokes – Angles
  59. Manchester Orchestra – Simple Math (A)
  60. Taj Mahal – Taj Mahal
  61. Avett Brothers – I & Love & You
  62. Aloe Blacc – Good Things
  63. PJ Harvey – Let England Shake
  64. Eddie Vedder – Ukulele Songs
  65. Feist – Metals
  66. St. Vincent
  67. Vaccines – What Did You Expect from the Vaccines?
  68. Steve Martin & Steep Canyon Rangers – Rare Bird Alert
  69. Black Carl – Borrowed (in-store performance)
  70. Jayhawks – Mockingbird Time
  71. Nick 13 – Nick 13 (A)
  72. Tinariwen – Tassili
  73. Beach Boys – Smile Sessions
  74. Coldplay – Mylo Xyloto
  75. TV on the Radio – Nine Types of Light
  76. Delaney & Bonnie – D & B Together
  77. Cults – Cults
  78. Wanda Jackson – Party Ain’t Over
  79. Raphael Saadiq – Stone Rollin’ (S)
  80. Loudon Wainwright III – Album 3
  81. Rave on Buddy Holly – Various Artists
  82. Decemberists – Live at Bull Moose (RSD)
  83. Sharon Jones & Dapkings – Soul Time (RSD)
  84. Dry River Yacht Club – Family Portraits
  85. William Elliot Whitmore – Field Songs
  86. Old Crow Medicine Show – OCMS
  87. Local Natives – Gorilla Manor
  88. Fucked Up – David Comes to Life
  89. Kills – Blood Pressures
  90. Ryan Adams – III & IV
  91. Warren Haynes – Man In Motion (S)
  92. Miles Davis – Kind of Blue
  93. Etta James – At Last
  94. Ahmad Jamal – Pittsburgh
  95. Taj Mahal – Natch’l Blues
  96. Mergence – Those Vibrant Young People Are Dead (S)
  97. City and Colour – Little Hell (A)
  98. Kinch – Incandenza (A)
  99. Beatles – Abbey Road (15 copies!)

S = Steve’s Top 10 of 2011 pick

K = Kristian’s Top 10 of 2011 pick

A = Andy’s Top 10 of 2011 pick

RSD = Record Store Day or Indie Black Friday title

Hoodlums Top 100 LPs of 2010

Sunday, January 2nd, 2011

This is our list of the top selling LPs of the past year.  It is interesting to compare it to the Top 100 CDs.  Check it out for yourself.

Hoodlums’ Top 100 LPs of 2010

  1. Bad Religion – The Dissent of Man (in-store appearance)
  2. Beatles – Abbey Road
  3. Jimi Hendrix – Live at Clark University (Record Store Day limited LP)
  4. Gorillaz – White Flag (Record Store Day limited LP)
  5. Phoenix – Fences (Record Store Day limited LP)
  6. Black Keys – Brothers
  7. Muse – Exogenesis (Record Store Day limited LP)
  8. Flaming Lips – Dark Side of the Moon (Record Store Day limited LP)
  9. R.E.M. – Chronic Town (Record Store Day limited LP)
  10. Pink Floyd – Dark Side of the Moon
  11. National – High Violet
  12. Mumford & Sons – Sigh No More
  13. Fela Kuti – My Lady Frustration (Record Store Day limited LP)
  14. MGMT – Siberian Dreams (Record Store Day limited LP)
  15. Smashing Pumpkins – Siamese Dream
  16. XX – XX
  17. Arcade Fire – Suburbs
  18. Radiohead – Kid A
  19. Jimi Hendrix – Merry Christmas (Indie Black Friday limited LP)
  20. Fun – Aim & Ignite (Record Store Day limited LP)
  21. Rolling Stone – Exile in Main Street (cover artist autographed)
  22. Jimi Hendrix – Valleys of Neptune
  23. Modest Mouse – Moon and Antarctica
  24. Vampire Weekend – Contra
  25. Broken Bells – Broken Bells
  26. Velvet Underground – Andy Warhol (Record Store Day limited LP)
  27. Cure – Disintegration
  28. Bob Dylan- Highway 61 Revisited
  29. Fleet Foxes – S/T
  30. Vampire Weekend – S/T
  31. Ariel Pink’s Haunted Graffiti – Before Today
  32. Phoenix – Wolfgang Amadeus Phoenix
  33. Them Crooked Vultures – Mind Eraser (Record Store Day limited LP)
  34. Pantera – Far Beyond Driven (Record Store Day limited LP)
  35. Beach House – Teen Dream
  36. Animal Collective – Merriweather Post Pavillion
  37. Dr. Dre – The Chronic
  38. Velvet Underground – Loaded
  39. Clash – London Calling
  40. Bon Iver – For Emma Forever Ago
  41. Neutral Milk Hotel – In the Aeroplane Over the Sea
  42. Panda Bear – Person Pitch
  43. Radiohead – OK Computer
  44. Radiohead – In Rainbows
  45. Roky Erickson/Okkervil River – True Love Cast Out All Evil
  46. George Harrison – All Things Must Pass (Indie Black Friday Exclusive)
  47. Doors – Doors (Indie Black Friday Exclusive)
  48. Josh Ritter – So Runs the World Away
  49. Monsters of Folk – S/T
  50. Drive-By Truckers – Thanksgiving Filter (Indie Black Friday)
  51. Dr. Dog – Shame Shame
  52. Black Keys – Thickfreakness
  53. Ramones – Ramones Mania
  54. Pantera – Cowboys from Hell (Record Store Day limited LP)
  55. Shins – Oh Inverted World
  56. Shines – Chutes Too Narrow
  57. Band of Horses – Everything All The Time
  58. Sonic Youth – Hits are for Squares (Record Store Day limited LP)
  59. Strokes – Room on Fire
  60. MGMT – Oracular Spectacular
  61. Joe Strummer – Streetcore (Record Store Day limited LP)
  62. Metallica – Live at Grimeys (Indie Black Friday)
  63. Blackroc – Blackroc
  64. Velvet Underground – Loaded (Colored Vinyl)
  65. Velvet Underground – S/T
  66. Grandmaster Flash – Message
  67. Black Keys – Attack and Release
  68. T-Rex – Electric Warrior
  69. Pantera – Vulgar Display of Power (Record Store Day limited LP)
  70. Sonic Youth – Evol (Record Store Day limited LP)
  71. Beach Boys – Pet Sounds
  72. Arcade Fire – Funeral
  73. Spoon – Transference
  74. New Pornographers – Together
  75. Animal Collective – Fall Be Kind
  76. Budos Band – Budos Band II
  77. Broken Social Scene – Forgiveness Rock Record
  78. MGMT – Congratulations
  79. Ray LaMontagne – God Willin’ and the Creek Will Rise
  80. Band of Horses – Infinite Arms
  81. Gil Scott-Heron – I’m New Here
  82. Mississippi John Hurt – Today
  83. Tom Waits – Mule Variations (Record Store Day limited LP)
  84. Devo – Fresh (Record Store Day limited LP)
  85. Beach House – Zebra
  86. Soundgarden – Telephantasm (Record Store Day limited LP)
  87. Yeasayer – O.N.E.
  88. Deerhoof – Green Cosmos (Record Store Day limited LP)
  89. Velvet Underground – S/T (colored vinyl)
  90. Otis Redding – Pain in My Heart
  91. Velvet Underground – Andy Warhol (colored vinyl)
  92. Black Sabbath – Paranoid
  93. Velvet Underground – White Light White Heat
  94. Meat Puppets – Meat Puppets II
  95. Misfits – Compilation
  96. Spoon – Kill the Moonlight
  97. Tom Waits – Swordfishtrombones
  98. Sonic Youth – Confusion is Sex (Record Store Day limited LP)
  99. Iron & Wine – Creek Drank the Cradle
  100. Iron & Wine – Woman King

Thank you for buying your LPs at Hoodlums.  Have a great 2011!

Why I Own a Record Store: Are You a Hippy?

Friday, September 24th, 2010

As Kristian and I celebrate our 12th Anniversary with Hoodlums (it’s a loose celebration, we’re gonna milk it), and continue to navigate a ever-changing waters of record store ownership, I’ve been doing a little reflecting on just why exactly I do this.  The first one was Goosebumps.

It was Tuesday morning, and I answered the phone, and the nice lady on the phone explained that she has some LPs she would like to bring down.  I began to explain the procedures for used LP buying and selling, and she said “No, you don’t understand, I want to give them to you”.  ”That’s great, I said… we appreciate it”.

She went on to explain that she was coming all the way down from Scottsdale because she had read the article in the Arizona Republic that morning.  Now usually I read the newspaper every morning (that’s right, I listen to CDs and read books and newspapers… cause I’m old school, and I can only mainline so much digital info), but I hadn’t gotten a chance to do so that morning, thanks to some sort of kid-related morning excursion. Because I had sent out a press release about our free J.J. Grey show, which was the next day, I assumed she saw something about that.

“I didn’t see the Republic this morning, was it something about our show tomorrow?”

“No, it’s an article about Social Networking.  It’s on the front page of the Arizona Living section”.

Cool.  There had a been a story about Valley record stores using social media to reach customers on AzCentral about two weeks earlier, but we had no idea it was going to run Valley-wide.   Anyway, she went on:

“There’s even a picture.  Is it you?”

“I don’t think so… they didn’t take any pictures during the interview… but they could have some sort of shot on hand”.

“Are you a hippy?”

“Uh, yeah… sorta”

“Do you have a beard?”

“Hmmm.  Not officially, but I don’t like to shave very much.”

At this point, I just figured it was Kristian (that’s his cartoon, although the boy has shaved off the beard recently) because, well, we are both kind of hippies. It wouldn’t be the first time.  Kristian once had a customer tell him that he was referred to Hoodlums with the reference that both of the owners look “a little like Jesus” (who’s pretty much the most famous bearded hippy of all time).

A little later in the day, our friend Brandon from Changing Hands brought a copy of the paper in, so I was able to check out the picture.

It wasn’t Kristian or me.  It was Dario from Stinkweeds, our central Phoenix indie colleagues, the other store featured in the article. I guess most (I say “most”, because we must remember Joe) of the remaining record store guys fit the profile (although Joe has a different record store guy profile).

Let’s face it: I am a bearded hippy.   I have been ever since I was old enough to grow a beard and do the things that hippies do.  Which is just another reason I own a record store. There’s just not many jobs where I can be my bearded hippy self.  Kristian either.

Both of us hippies thank you for your support.

The Greatest Chicago Blues – By Guest Blogger Bob Corritore

Friday, September 3rd, 2010

September is Blues Month at Hoodlums.  That means that all Blues CDs, DVDs, and LPs are 10% off the regular price throughout the month. New and used.  Special orders too.

It also means we are going to have some fun with the Blues.  In addition to a free live show with J.J. Grey (of J.J. Grey and Mofro), we will be featuring great blues titles in most of our listening posts.

Last but not least, we are going to talk about the Blues.  As a Blues lover myself, I wrote a little blog called Blues for Rockers, which you are of course encouraged to check out.  I’ve been hanging around for a while, and I’ve learned about some really classic, cheap CDs… so I’m mildly qualified for such a task.

On the other hand, THIS blog is from perhaps the most qualified Bluesman in Phoenix: Mr. Bob Corritore.

That’s right… the guy that does Those Lowdown Blues on KJZZ.  The guy who owns the Rhythm Room.  The guy who’s played the harp with everyone on either side of the muddy water.  Here’s a couple more relevant links:

Bob’s Webpage

Bob’s Allmusic.com Page

See what I mean?  I am but a mere Blues fan. This guy lives the Blues.

We asked him – but we didn’t think he’d have time to do it.  He did it.  He submitted his list of Essential Chicago Blues CDs. Check it out and see what you think.  We used it to fills some little holes in our blues section.  (That means that Bob is going to cost me some money personally too).

Anyway, check ‘em out.  Don’t forget, they are all on sale throughout September.  In addition, we’ve got Bob’s new CD (pictured), as well as a whole bunch of other great Phoenix Blues CDs… provided by, you guessed it, Bob himself.

Thanks again, amigo.

Bob Corritore’s Essential Chicago Blues CDs

1) Little Walter / The Complete Chess Masters / Hip-O Select

2) Muddy Waters – His Best Vols 1 & 2 / Chess

3) Howlin Wolf – His Best Vols 1 & 2 / Chess

4) Robert Nighthawk / Bricks In My Pillow / Delmark

5) Chicago The Blues Today Vols 1 2 & 3 / Vanguard

6) JB Hutto & The Hawks / Hawk Squat / Delmark

7) Junior Wells / Hoodoo Man Blues / Delmark

8) Johnny Young / Chicago Blues / Arhoolie

9) The Essential Sonny Boy Williamson / Chess

10) Blues Masters / The Very Best Of Jimmy Reed / Rhino

11) Big Walter Horton with Carey Bell / Alligator

12) Koko Taylor / I Got What It Takes / Alligator

13) Snooky Pryor / Shake A Hand / Blind Pig

14) Eddie Taylor / Feel So Bad / HighTone

15) Magic Slim / Scufflin’ / Blind Pig

16) Elmore James / The Sky Is Crying / Rhino

17) Jimmy Rogers / The Complete Chess Recordings / Chess

18) Essential Magic Sam / Fuel

19) Essential Otis Rush / Fuel

20) Bo Diddley / His Best / Chess

A What Laura Says Story by the Record Store Geek

Wednesday, August 25th, 2010

A little video with a story about What Laura Says, who will be playing live next week at Hoodlums.

The video refers to our “Prospective Hoodlums Test”, which should be viewable as a PDF if you click the link below. If you decide to take it… no cheating. If you need an answer key, I’m at the store every day except Wednesday and Sunday.

What Laura Says (with guest sitarist Kristopher Rein).  Special Acoustic Show. Live on the Hoodstage. Thursday, September 2nd. 7-9PM. Free and open to the public. Tell a friend.

Prospective Hoodlum Test

Have a great day.  Steve, Kristian, and the hoodlums at Hoodlums

Music Biz observations from our first year

Tuesday, October 27th, 2009

The following blog is actually an email that was sent to our “Music Biz Bigshots” (which is how we lovingly refer to all of the record label and distributor people that we have done business with for twenty years now) email list. We always made it a point to let the industry know what we think of their hilarious decision-making while we were at ASU, and we are still doing it out here.  This time, we figured we’d at least leave it out there for the customers. After all, you guys are affected by their short-sightedness as well.

Hello fellow music biz geeks,

Are we still in this crazy business?  Man, it seems like forever since we talked.  Back in the old days, back in the time when we thought we understood the phrase “uncharted waters”, we used to send charts out every week.

Steve Wiley - Professional HoodlumAnyway, down there you will find a chart.  It’s our top 99 of our first full year at the new store.  Although the old store has a totally new personality, mine is still the same (insert smart-ass comment here), so I figured I’d comment on some of the industry-related things we noticed in our 1st year at the new joint.  If you want to scroll down and skip the babble… we’ll never know.

So what’s been going on at Hoodlums, you ask?  How’s biz and all that?

Well, we are officially a year old.  If you remember, we soft-opened on Saturday, September 20th, and our grand opening was in early October.  Two days later the stock market dove, officially signaling the start of the freakshow economy.

Since then we’ve had our first real holiday season, six art shows, and Hoodstock.  We’ve stirred up conservative radio hosts, interacted with our community, learned how to buy used vinyl, and watched another unbelievable year’s worth of changes in the music industry.  Joey Kramer used our bathroom.  So did Peter Yarrow.

We haven’t sent you charts because we’ve been focused on the customers and building up the store.  It isn’t cause we haven’t been paying attention to this crazy $#%& (I haven’t turned anti-vulgarity, I have to do that in case customers are on the list) industry.  As usual, we can’t speak for other stores, or any of you cats, but we can tell you how the music biz looks from our tiny little vantage point.

1. Prices are getting better on catalog.

Let’s start positive.  Those WEA 7.99 titles (Talking Heads, ZZ Top, Bonnie Raitt, Faith No More, etc.) and those Sony 6.99 (Ten Years After, Mike Bloomfield, Milt Jackson, etc) titles have been huge sellers.  We brought a bunch in around February and they have been moving along better than we had hoped.  For 6.99 new, people will buy that David Bromberg album they used to love.  Now, with most of those great Sony 11.99 titles selling at 9.99 (don’t give me that “we don’t have a list price” bullshit, we still base price on cost, not the margin Sony decides we should lose), we are sporting a pretty mean selection of classic CDs at ten or less.  That’s what we’ve been talking about for eleven years: Cheaper prices = More sales.

2. Prices are still too high on catalog.

In the meantime, I shudder to think of how many CSN, Radiohead, or Led Zeppelin CDs we could sell at a realistic list.  18.98?  17.98?  In this day and age?  I can’t even believe those are still a price points.  Is there an economist in the house over in those Ivory Towers?  There must be someone who understands supply and demand.  Call me crazy, but since I’ve been lobbying lower prices to the industry for years to little avail, I’ve decided to make a plea to the artist.  Read the “Robert Plant – A Story and Video Plea” blog here.

3. High list prices more or less kill plans to develop and sell newer jazz, blues, and world.

While the catalog pricing offers some reasonable options in these genres, when it comes to new releases, who can afford it?  Note to the Ivory Tower: After years of watching the way you market these genres, we assume that you don’t ever want to target any young adults at all… but we should at least mention that baby boomers are price conscious too, and pricing every artist on every adult genre at 17.98 or 18.98 list is a bad idea.  I’d love to turn someone, young or old, on to a new Joe Lovano or Roy Hargrove CD, but why bother trying when you can turn them on to a classic Jackie McLean, John Coltrane, or Sonny Rollins CD for under ten bucks?

4. Hang on to your obscure, and not so obscure, CDs.

We are starting to see a lot of CDs go out of print.  Speaking of supply and demand, you want LeRoy Hutson’s Greatest Hits?  It’s gonna cost you no less than $150 on Amazon (pretty much the same price they wanted for the Beatles boxes, isn’t it?).  That plays right into our little hands, because when it comes to finding special orders… a scrappy little joint like ours is the place to go.

5. Label reps that set up records are a dying breed.

It may be because we are just a little joint – but we rarely see a label rep set up new releases any more.  There’s still a few out there that can be counted on to consistently do so (Jay from Sony/now Nettwerk, Melissa from Epitaph/Anti, and the gang at Fearless come to mind), and some that are starting to come on board, but for the most part it feels like we are on our own when it comes to deciding what it worthy of promoting or not.

That’s not all bad, and we aren’t necessarily upset.  After all, we are more than capable of finding stuff for the posts.  But for sure on the right releases a great set-up makes a huge difference… and for sure a great rep that know what to push at your store (or in this day and age, one that pushes at all) can make all the difference.  Look at all the Sony and Epitaph stuff that made the chart.  There’s no way that NASA makes this chart without support.  Would we have brought it in?  Sure.  One copy.  Would we have put it in the post?  Probably not.

How does the lack of set-up hurt?  If someone would have worked with us on the recent Noisettes or Raveonettes CDs, we probably would have quadrupled sales so far.  Do we react once we see demand?  Sure, but it hurts at first, when it matters most.  In this economy, in this industry, we do our new release buying with caution.  Often, we aren’t quite sure what customers are going to want (since the internet has given every customer the ability to find out their own street dates, we don’t quite get the “pre-buzz” like the old days).  People just sorta show up on street date and buy.  It’s easy with proven champs like Flaming Lips or Built to Spill, but since we don’t listen to the radio or monitor internet activity, its tough to judge whether those mid-level groups still have interested fans.  If we don’t hear from anyone at the label, we assume the label isn’t really behind them anymore.  If we buy the CD at all, we buy one.

Like I said, our little store may not rate the coverage… and we can live with that, but I don’t think that’s it.  We seem to be on the radar still.  We still get visits from out-of-town Music Biz Bigshots.  We still get stuff in the mail.  It seems more likely that either: a) there aren’t enough label reps (Phoenix doesn’t have a WEA, Sony, or EMD sales rep – and our UNI sales rep is covering like 32 states or something);  b) many of the labels out there aren’t focused on on physical product at the indie stores; or c) lack of accountability and direction are at an all time high.  Probably a little of everything.

6. Everything is still free on the Internet.

Somehow in spite of those FBI stickers… in spite of the lawsuits… in spite of the “switched” street dates, the branded play copies, and the Congressional testimony… every release is still out there for a grand total of nothing.   I know because we have to get a lot of our play copies, the ones we need to help sell your CDs, the same way that a huge portion of the rest of the world has been getting their music for twelve years now.

Can you guys finally relent and monetize the file-sharing?  Maybe that way CD prices will continue to fall and those who want to collect and peddle the hard copies can do so – while those that are content with files can do their thing legally.  While we are on the subject: A buck a song is still too much.

7. Labels, in true form, are already stifling the vinyl resurgence with ridiculous prices.

It was totally predictable.  Customers find value in LPs… so labels jack prices until the value goes away.  It’s the same Ivory Tower game plan that has helped kill CDs sales over the past twelve years.

It’s simple, anything over $20 is TOO MUCH for an LP.  Even if the digital file in included.  Each week, as we decide what to bring in… we simply look at the list price. These days, instead of 18.98, which is fine (with the digital info), we see lots of 24.98.  If the price is over twenty, unless it is something we can’t live without (like the Wilco releases), we don’t bring it in.  The biggest recent example is the Muse reissues.  Four releases from a very powerful band at Hoodlums, yet only one (Black Holes..) is priced under twenty.  We brought in Black Holes, and it is nearing double digit sales.  The other three have become special orders.

There is it: Our take on how the music biz decision-making is looking at this little store.  As always, we appreciate your support… and your taking the time to read our opinions.  Have a great day.

Steve, Kristian, and the hoodlums at Hoodlums.

The Top 99 of Hoodlums’ 1st year (September 2008 – September 2009)

The album is the latest release by the artist, unless specified.

  1. Kings of Leon
  2. Neko Case
  3. Animal Collective
  4. Black Carl
  5. Darren Mahoney
  6. Fleet Foxes
  7. Yeah Yeah Yeahs
  8. Phoenix
  9. Wilco
  10. Bon Iver
  11. What Laura Says
  12. Andrew Bird
  13. Dead Weather
  14. Green Day
  15. Ray Lamontagne
  16. Neil Young
  17. TV on the Radio
  18. Bruce Springsteen
  19. Catfish Groove Farm
  20. Calexico
  21. Regina Spektor
  22. U2
  23. Kinch
  24. Iron and Wine
  25. Ben Harper & Relentless 7
  26. Leonard Cohen
  27. Bob Dylan
  28. VA – Thank You, Goodnight
  29. Fleet Foxes – EP
  30. Iron & Wine
  31. Decemberists
  32. Lucinda Williams
  33. Grizzly Bear
  34. Silversun Pickups
  35. Manchester Orchestra
  36. She & Him
  37. Sonic Youth
  38. Jack Johnson/D. Frankenreiter/G. Love
  39. Steve Earle
  40. Vampire Weekend
  41. Camera Obscura
  42. St. Vincent
  43. Adele
  44. Kanye West
  45. Fun
  46. Dan Auerbach
  47. Bloc Party
  48. Beatles – Abbey
  49. Of Montreal
  50. Dinosaur Jr.
  51. Arctic Monkeys
  52. Ben Folds
  53. Bob Dylan – Telltale Signs/Boot 8
  54. Dave Matthews
  55. Elvis Costello
  56. Miles Davis – Kind of Blue
  57. Abba – Gold
  58. Jolie Holland
  59. Jenny Lewis
  60. Beatles – Sgt. Peppers
  61. Ryan Adams and Cardinals
  62. Jeff Beck
  63. Q-Tip
  64. Death Cab for Cutie
  65. Damien Rice – Live at Fingerprints
  66. NASA
  67. Bonnie Raitt – Give it Up
  68. Mars Volta – Octahedron
  69. Killers
  70. Radiohead
  71. Mgmt
  72. Franz Ferdinand
  73. Derek Trucks – Already Live
  74. Milt Jackson – Sunflower
  75. Ben Harper – Live at Twist and Shout
  76. Interpol – Live
  77. Son Volt
  78. Peter Bjorn and John
  79. Bob Marley & Wailers – Legend
  80. Taj Mahal – Taj Mahal
  81. Slumdog Millionaire OST
  82. Byrne/Eno
  83. Eminem
  84. Robert Plant/Allison Krauss
  85. Michael Franti
  86. Black Keys
  87. Talking Heads – Remain in Light
  88. Clapton/Winwood – Madison Square
  89. Coldplay
  90. Lily Allen
  91. Mark Olson/Gary Louris
  92. Uncle Tupelo – No Depression
  93. Kings of Leon – Youth and Young Manhood
  94. John Mayer – Village Sessions
  95. Chet Atkins/Les Paul – Chester and Lester
  96. Ramblin’ Jack Elliott
  97. Pearl Jam – Live at Easy Street
  98. VA – Vintage Verve (I love this, as I was on the panel that selected it)
  99. Alejandro Escovedo