Moment To Moment
The past is no more and the future is not yet: both are unnecessarily moving in directions which don't exist. One used to exist, but no longer exists, and one has not even started to exist. The only right person is one who lives moment to moment, whose arrow is directed to the moment, who is always here and now; wherever he is, his whole consciousness, his whole being, is involved in the reality of here and in the reality of now. That's the only right direction. Only such a man can enter into the golden gate. The present is the golden gate. Here-now is the golden gate. ...And you can be in the present only if you are not ambitious--no accomplishment, no desire to achieve power, money, prestige, even enlightenment, because all ambition leads you into the future. Only a non-ambitious man can remain in the present. A man who wants to be in the present has not to think, has just to see and enter the gate. Experience will come, but experience has not to be premeditated.
Osho The Great Zen Master Ta Hui Chapter 37
--[osho]--

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Home arrow News arrow Latest arrow For the record, this vinyl buyer is a true musichead
For the record, this vinyl buyer is a true musichead Print E-mail
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Friday, 22 February 2008

http://www.roanoke.com/columnists/berrier/wb/150819

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Ralph Berrier

Riffs, the regional music scene as heard by The Roanoke Times reporter Ralph Berrier, will appear weekly on Sundays.

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Like a lot of 22-year-old dudes, Sam Lunsford is into music. He plays in a couple of bands and even works at a record store. Like most dudes into music, he has thousands of songs in his collection.

Unlike most dudes, though, he has all those songs on vinyl albums. He owns about 500, from old 78 rpm hillbilly records he inherited from his great-grandparents to reissues of classic-rock LPs to new releases from cool bands.

"I've got a good needle and a good setup" on which to play those records, Lunsford said from behind the counter at Plan 9 Music, where he works. The store sells CDs, DVDs and, yes, vinyl.

Other musicheads are into vinyl, he said. Plan 9, which moved to Grandin Road from Towers Shopping Center in December, sells more vinyl records than DVDs, he said.

"And people buy a lot of DVDs," he said.

The image of the modern-day vinyl buyer is that of the middle-aged, geeky record collector who prattles on about "sound quality" and "warmer tones" and "sonic spectrum" and other audiophile-speak. He's the guy with 2,000 albums in his collection, including rare Japanese imports of Engelbert Humperdinck records.

That depiction would be considered a cliche, except that it's mostly accurate.

Now, however, younger geeks ... I mean collectors ... are getting into the act. Plan 9 carries a selection of recent releases by Arcade Fire, Ryan Adams, The Decemberists and other groups that produce vinyl versions of their work.

Most of these LPs are considered vanity projects (again, owing to the inherent geekiness of most musicheads) that are expensive to produce and far less profitable than CDs. Fewer than 1 million vinyl records are sold each year, according to SoundScan, although some analysts think the number is much higher because the music industry doesn't have a good way to count sales of used records, especially on eBay.

There's enough demand that Amazon.com has added a Web page for vinyl records.

Still, times are tough for record stores, even Plan 9.

Though sales initially doubled at the new location, 2008 hasn't gotten off to a banner start. The new location is larger and boasts a performance space, but so far the store is only hosting one show per month. The next gig, on Feb. 22, will be another benefit show by Doug Cheatwood and the Bastards of Fate, who lost their gear in a warehouse fire last month.

I hope Plan 9 makes it, although it's tough to be optimistic about the future of any record store. The good thing about the new digs is that it increases Grandin Road's cool factor. The street has a critical mass of artsy-type businesses, with the record store, the Grandin Theatre, a ballet company, a used bookstore and a few neat restaurants lining the block.

Vinyl records certainly won't lead to an economic revival in the music business, but their place in the collective consciousness of serious music lovers is secure.

"It's so much more personal to have a copy of something," said Plan 9's assistant manager, Jamie Booker, 24. "I know iPods can dock into everything in the world, but there's something personal and better about having something you can touch and share and experience."

Of course, she's going to say that because she needs to sell records. But she really means it. She doesn't download songs.

Lunsford does, though. But he likes those old records, too.

"People are weird," he said. "They'll always want to collect things. As long as we keep collecting, there'll always be records."

 
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