A bit of clarification for those readers who do not live in the metro Toronto area. Sam the Record Man actually did go bankrupt and closed over 100 of its' stores in 2002, but then business picked up a little and the flagship store, that being the one on Yonge Street with the two huge neon records on the front outside stayed open...that is until May 30, 2007 when the owner announced that that store would close too as of June 30, 2007. This is rather sad because this place is, where among other fun things, I and many of the Blue Rodeo fans saw Greg Keelor perform live just last November.
Technically, this thread should probably be in the General Music forum, but I consciously chose to place it here in album and song reviews because the album as we know it is gone and the song as we consume it or them, has changed so radically that a true 20th century cultural icon, that being the "Record Store", kind of like the Drive-In Movie is rapidly becoming extinct. And if you don't think that this entity of the record store is not important, consider that it was at a record shop in a department store in Liverpool, England that a young clerk named Brian Epstein was asked by customers for records by a then (1962) virually unknown skiffle group called The Beatles. Epstein sought out the records for his customers, then he saw for himself The Beatles at the Cavern Club and the rest is rock and roll history...a cultural icon indeed!
Granted hundreds of millions of compact discs are still floating around out there and they will still be made and sold mostly on the Internet, and at a few used record shops who will boutique the demand much like the dwindling demand for LP records and the even more dwindling collector's demand for original vinyl 45 rpm records. But, the times they are a-changin'.
So, just to conform this thread with the forum of "album and song reviews", I'll give you a review of a song instead of an album because people are now creating and accessing music song by song in June 2007. It's not a really new song, but it did appear on a cd entitled "True Companion" released in 2003 by Joe Grushecky & the Houserockers...Pittsburgh bar band extraordinaire. Joe also collaborated with Bruce Springsteen on more than a couple of songs, but the one I like is the record's opener, "A Long Way to Go" penned entirely by Joe Grushecky. It's a story song, quite autobiographical about Joe and his love for rock and roll and how that love for the music influenced how he was told to watch his brother by his parents while the boys went to Pittsburgh to see the Stones, later making career decisions, and then later where he traveled to, and what he did with his life decade by decade. Each chorus ends with the simple but ebullient assertion, "I got a long way to go." Yes, he married, had kids, teaches as a day job, taught his kids his love for music, moved to the suburbs and he's moving a bit slower these days but, oh I'll let Joe tell you his story...
"I got to get up for work this morning
I still wanna rock and roll.
Hell, I'm only in my fifties,
And I got a long way to go!"
A Long Way to Go by Joe Grushecky, c. 2005.