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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5385
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Saturday, February 16, 2013 - 12:43 am:   

I got Microdisney's Crooked Mile on vinyl in Andorra in 1988 for the equivalent of about £2. Listening to much Microdisney lately reminded me of this.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 762
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Saturday, February 16, 2013 - 09:56 am:   

Not quite to the subject, but it reminded me of when I went into a second hand record shop in Regensburg a few years ago and the owner took one look at me and immediately reached over and put Focus 3 on his record deck... the first album I ever bought, the one that really got me hooked on music... very spooky.
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skulldisco
Member
Username: Skulldisco

Post Number: 2177
Registered: 10-2008
Posted on Saturday, February 16, 2013 - 08:20 pm:   

As a young teen our family spent a dreary week in a caravan in a dreadful seaside town in Scotland called Stranraer, truly the pits of the earth!
My time there was brightened though when I bought Zinc Alloy and the Hidden Riders of Tomorrow by T Rex, and Young Americans by David Bowie in a furniture shop of all places, which also had a small record section!
A town this backwards would never have had a record shop!
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Pádraig Collins
Member
Username: Pádraig_collins

Post Number: 5390
Registered: 05-2005
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 05:22 am:   

That is indeed spooky Stuart.

Kevin, I don't know Stranraer, but I know Oban and I think it is something similar.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 763
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 11:36 am:   

I seem to remember Oban as quite a lovely place, Padraig! I think they have gone overboard on some tourist items (don't they have a piper out in a fishing boat in the bay at sunset in summer to "pipe down the light" or something?)But it's in a beautiful setting up the West Coast. I think, from reading J Coe and his contemporaries, that wet caravan holidays were responsible for spoiling a lot of places for a whole generation!
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 765
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 02:31 pm:   

It wasn't a great album, but I remember walking out of Gamla Stan in Stockholm one day and popping into a small record shop that had a basket of singles without their central spindle hole...is that possible?... and going cheap. And of the bunch I bought, one was Right here; but I couldn't play it for a month or two till I went to see a mate in Gothenburg who had both a record deck and some kind of gizmo you could place in the centre to accommodate the spindle... To be honest, I never liked Right here that much, but the B-side included When people were dead, and when I heard that, I knew I'd found a band to love...
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Hugh Nimmo
Member
Username: Hugh_nimmo

Post Number: 501
Registered: 03-2007
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 03:09 pm:   

Something like this? I remember them well.

http://www.tshirtgrill.com/details.aspx? ID=25072&CAT=39
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3146
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 05:52 pm:   

Stuart, do you mean that the singles had no hole of any sort or had a giant hole? For whatever reason, 45rpm 7 inch records in the U.S. normally had those gigantic holes. Record players came with adaptors for them. I remember seeing a few dedicated record players for singles. They were automatic. You would stack up a bunch of singles on it and it would drop and play one at a time.

Coincidentally, some co-workers brought up this very subject a couple days ago. None of us had any idea why singles had these giant holes while LPs had the small ones. I remember a lot of U.K. singles which had the sensible small hole but also cut-outs in case somebody wanted to adapt the record to the U.S. standard. I also remember the adaptor that Hugh's link shows on the T shirt.
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skulldisco
Member
Username: Skulldisco

Post Number: 2179
Registered: 10-2008
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 06:20 pm:   

Purely a guess, but were the giant holes maybe there so they could be used in jukeboxes?
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Randy Adams
Member
Username: Randy_adams

Post Number: 3147
Registered: 03-2005
Posted on Sunday, February 17, 2013 - 08:01 pm:   

That's as good a guess as anybody's Kevin. It would make for a good explanation why the British record companies had the perforations to permit conversion of their singles to the large hole.
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Greg Adams
Member
Username: Greg_adams

Post Number: 39
Registered: 06-2005
Posted on Monday, February 18, 2013 - 12:11 am:   

I had the hardest time finding a copy of Spring Hill Fair because it wasn't released in the US. Around 1989, I had plans to drive to Ohio to see a concert. The night before, I had a dream that I found a copy of Spring Hill Fair in an out-of-the-way record store.

As I was driving through tiny Oxford, Ohio, I saw a record store down one of the side streets and thought, "Damn! That's the store that was in my dream!" I went inside and, sure enough, there was a copy of Spring Hill Fair on vinyl. It was the only copy I ever saw before I had internet access.
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Stuart Wilson
Member
Username: Stuart

Post Number: 766
Registered: 10-2006
Posted on Monday, February 18, 2013 - 07:47 am:   

More spookiness!
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Rob Brookman
Member
Username: Rob_b

Post Number: 1725
Registered: 08-2006
Posted on Sunday, March 03, 2013 - 03:05 pm:   

Greg, Oxford, Ohio is where I went to college and was home to three or four quite outstanding record stores back at that time (I graduated in '88). In fact, I picked up my first GBs record (Before Hollywood) at one of them.

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