What did you like the most about it?I hope it's OK to drag this thread up from the depths, but I'm not sure where else to post, so I'll keep it brief and succinct:
I finally made it to the museum in Alameda, and it was a wonderful experience!
c
I'm still processing the experience (there's a lot to take in during only one relatively brief visit!), but I think what I liked most were the 50s-60s-ish era radio studio recreation in the back room and the adjacent repair shop.What did you like the most about it?
I'm still processing the experience (there's a lot to take in during only one relatively brief visit!), but I think what I liked most were the 50s-60s-ish era radio studio recreation in the back room


@michael hagerty Fascinating!
I had seen a mention of it earlier in this thread, but I didn't make the connection until you pointed it out!
You probably already know this, but I was told that it's actually functional, and heard during a guided tour that I tagged along behind (I wasn't registered to be part of it, but I was there, and they didn't mind, so why not!) that they're going to be broadcasting from that studio over the air via low power AM (Part 15) starting toward the end of the month, so for all intents and purposes, it works much like the real thing!
I can hardly wait to go back for another visit, and I'm considering signing up as a member.
californiahistoricalradio.com
bayarearadio.org

Darn!Also, the annual Bay Area Radio Hall of Fame luncheon is a week from tomorrow---Saturday, October 18:
That sounds... tedious (but cataloging and archiving media like this often is, it seems). I don't know if I can help any, but I'd love to check it out at some point and maybe get involved.I don't know if I've mentioned it, but Stan, @BossRadioDJ and I are working on a project to catalog and archive the mountain of tapes, discs and whatever else in the way of audio that has been donated to the museum over the years. There was an earlier attempt, but it got derailed by COVID. This time we're going all the way with it.
After the cataloging, the tapes (some of them exceptionally rare and very old) will be handed off to preservation pros for very careful digitization with the end result being it being available to listen.
So, in August and September, I spent most Saturdays either with Stan, David, Stan and David or on my own digging in and getting this thing off the ground. There's a lot more to go, and there are some interruptions that are unavoidable, but I'll be back in there in November.
Darn!
I won't be available!
Oh, well. The Sturgeon seems to make fairly regular appearances, so I'm sure I'll get my chance to see it eventually.
By the way, if I haven't said it already (I know others have), I really like your avatar
c




I know, and it's one of the numerous reasons why I feel like I was born at least 30 years too late.Amoeba and Rasputin are great, but if you weren't around for the 70s record store wars, you missed out.
I know, and it's one of the numerous reasons why I feel like I was born at least 30 years too late.
I really appreciate your attention to detail regarding history, by the way! If we ever met, I'm sure we could go on for hours, because history really fascinates me (my main beat is computers and related technologies, but I am strongly interested in all sorts of history... anything from politics to places, roads, cars, radio, etc. because on some level, it's all intertwined and you can't fully understand one subject without having at least a decent working knowledge of all these others to put things in the proper context).
Speaking of, does the SF Tower Records building still exist in some form? It looks vaguely familiar for some reason.
c
I’ve heard of Peaches Records and Licorice Pizza but not the other ones, so thanks for mentioning them.Tower's success started a boom in discount record chains---The Wherehouse, Eucalyptus Records, Peaches Records, Banana Records, Licorice Pizza---and those are just the six with significant presences in California that come to mind. There were more.
Endless price wars---"list price $5.98, our price $2.49!" Constant promotion. It couldn't last and it didn't.
Amoeba and Rasputin are great, but if you weren't around for the 70s record store wars, you missed out.
I’ve heard of Peaches Records and Licorice Pizza but not the other ones, so thanks for mentioning them.


Reading this thread dredges up memories from my tender yewt (youth) in New York City. My first job was as a paper boy, but my first employment was with Sam Goody's, the records/tapes/audio/musical instruments/sheet music chain. They took a measured approach to growth. It was never balls-to-the-wall, spend-whatever-it-takes growth. Maybe that's why Goody lasted as long as it did. Also because Sam continued to run the place himself, and it was largely a family-and-trusted-friends operation, with his two sons having significant roles in the business. There was loyalty that worked in both directions. Until they got an offer they couldn't refuse from Musicland, which itself was a subsidiary of American Can Company and had access to whatever capital it took to expand into a nationwide footprint. That's when the explosive growth started, and the seeds of its destruction took root.
But what you're describing, Mike, sounds more like the Crazy Eddie and The Wiz chains back in the greater Metropolitan Area. Expand, expand, expand, advertise like mad, spend whatever it takes, and treat the corporate till as your own piggy bank until the Feds catch on.