Next batch of old bags. These are scanned from singles/CD bags rather than photographed. Highway 61 only dealt CDs and was up at Fletchers Walk by the library. A HMV logo from when they still put the dog on everything. Plastic Factory from the far end of Corporation St - not the same place as Virgin used to be. Swordfish when they were still in Needless Alley. I think Tempest had the place on Bull Street when they used that logo. Wayahead were (a stall?) in the Bull Ring but I don't remember much about them.
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Don't forget Swordfish Records are still going.Hurst St was the first place for the Diskery which is still going in Bromsgove St.
Swordfish Records is also still active in Dalton St off Newton St by the crown courts.
Great little independents if you want difficult to get hold of CD or vinyl. I was in Swordfish the other week, still being run by the original guy.
Give them a visit and support your independents, its all we will have left soon.
The shop closest to Dawlish Rd would have been S G Beckett on the other side of Tiverton Rd.I remember 2 when I worked at Patrick Motors on Dawlish Road Selly Oak, I worked with a guy Adrian Stanley who would walk down to the Bristol Road on pay day at lunch time and buy a least 2 LP.s.
Then the other I walked past every day going for lunch it was at the bottom of Ryde Park Road on the Bristol Road just down from Colmers Farm School, I remember going in and buying Diamond Dogs by Bowie 1974, the woman who owned the shop was very well feed, but she new me because my mum worked in the grocery store a couple of doors down and she always came out to talk, it looks like it may be a vape shop or the Rednal Café now, and the café where I would eat lunch every day from school is now a fish bar.
What great places record shops use to be even into the 80's just as good as a book store browsing looking to find a surprise.
My record buying days came to a end in England I got to know a record producer for the beeb and he got so many records from labels sent to him he would just give me stacks of records and would say "any sound good let me know", there was a lot of junk but many good one's, all the LP's had a small gold stamped sign on the front with a rectangle boarder with the words not for sale printed in gold.
I can see now the front of the music box, the woman who owned it was a little bit of a busy body and would stand by the front door waiting to pounce on a unsuspecting passer by, now of course I realize that during the day she probably did not have a lot of foot trafficThe shop closest to Dawlish Rd would have been S G Beckett on the other side of Tiverton Rd.
The one close to Ryde Park road was Music Box.
These from 1972 Kellys
My first single I ever bought was kung fu fighting by Carl Douglas in 1974 before that my mum worked in a pub and she bought single records from the man who came to change the records in the juke box even though they had no middles in them but I think all the records them days had removable middles that you could put in any record to play. I remember getting my records from a little stall in the indoor bullring market I cannot remember its name in the 70s also I remember going to the diskery on Bristol rd looking for my boy lollipop by millie I could not get it anywhere cus it was an old record but they had it but only in an album so I bought it for 50p !!!!!! Even though all the records went out of fashion years ago they are now coming back in fashion ,well that says it ALL!!!!!!!
The diskery has come up alot in this topic and is quite famous now, I used to work in bissell street highgate and would often walk up there on a Friday afternoon wage packet in hand here's a link with a bit of info about the shopMy first single I ever bought was kung fu fighting by Carl Douglas in 1974 before that my mum worked in a pub and she bought single records from the man who came to change the records in the juke box even though they had no middles in them but I think all the records them days had removable middles that you could put in any record to play. I remember getting my records from a little stall in the indoor bullring market I cannot remember its name in the 70s also I remember going to the diskery on Bristol rd looking for my boy lollipop by millie I could not get it anywhere cus it was an old record but they had it but only in an album so I bought it for 50p !!!!!! Even though all the records went out of fashion years ago they are now coming back in fashion ,well that says it ALL!!!!!!!
Sorry lyn I did not mean the songs went out of fashion (I know they never will) I meant the vinyls there put on .hi sugar i dont think the 50s 60s and 70s music has ever really gone out of fashion...i play it a lot...will todays music still be remembered and played in 50 or 60 years time ?? somehow i doubt it...
lyn
Yes that's probably the stall I went too in the market as I was well into reggae them days .I remember the stall being on a corner and very dark and about you chatting the girls up in woolworths it was all in jest ! Nowadays it would be classed as assault . How times have CHANGED!The Diskery when it was in Hurst St. They moved to near the Bristol Rd during the early seventies. Great place for Motown and Soul. Also the record shop in Woolworths at the Bullring was good. We went there to "chat up" the young ladies who worked there and ask them to play Motown records. Also there was a place in the indoor market that only sold Reggae. Can't remember what it was called..
the record shop in the bullring would have been Don Christie, after they moved from ladypool roadThe Diskery when it was in Hurst St. They moved to near the Bristol Rd during the early seventies. Great place for Motown and Soul. Also the record shop in Woolworths at the Bullring was good. We went there to "chat up" the young ladies who worked there and ask them to play Motown records. Also there was a place in the indoor market that only sold Reggae. Can't remember what it was called..
I remember the shop but can't remember what it was called. They must have known some DJs there because they had quite a few stamped "not for resale".Did there used to be a record shop on Summer Row in the early 80's, just down from the Shakespeare Pub?
(I remember there was a shop there that sold movie posters and memorabilia, a cafe and an adult bookstore, and a snooker club called 'The Anchor')
They say vinyl records are making a comeback, even outselling streams. Trouble with that is that streaming a record will pay someone slightly less than a penny and a vinyl record will cost you £20 (they only count the new ones).[cut]
Even though all the records went out of fashion years ago they are now coming back in fashion ,well that says it ALL!!!!!!!
They say vinyl records .......................... for most people and somehow I doubt that will change.