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Michael K. Fell's avatar

At 2.5 million, metropolitan Portland, Oregon is obviously nowhere near as big as London, nor is it a world city. But it is still one of the major West Coast cities between Vancouver, Canada, and San Diego, and many tourists pushing down to California or up to Seattle/Vancouver stop in Portland. We also have Mississippi Records, which brings in many record tourists from around the world (and touring bands). 

The only gripe I have in a used record store, however, is when somebody (always a man) takes a huge stack of LPs to the one listening station and takes zero consideration in others who also may want to give an LP a quick spin before purchase. It's all about them and their massive pile and they won't budge. These aren't tourists, though; these are always regular crate diggers, and, to be honest, more often than not of a certain younger generation. 

Just my vegan two cents.

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Faith Current's avatar

"If you are a serious collector, you know the drill: choose your spot, flick as quickly as you can, and move on. Unless you’re standing next to one of your best friends, keep a safe distance to your left and right, avoid eye contact, and don’t engage in conversation."

Okay, this one has me completely baffled, because this is exactly the opposite of my experience in record stores and why I love them. I'm not a serious collector, this is true, so maybe I'm the annoying person that you're writing about, because record stores are exactly where I love striking up conversations, because it's one of the only public spaces where I can reliably encounter people who love music and have interesting things to say about it. A record store is *exactly* where I want to start up conversations, pull out records and talk about liner notes, etc. I've had some of my best conversations about music with the person across from me browsing in a vinyl store!

I don't hog the stacks though. 😎

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