http://www.usatoday.com/life/music/news/2009-04-16-record-store-day_N.htm

What started out as a promotional tool has turned into a party celebrating the 
culture of independently owned record stores.

On Saturday, more than 1,000 stores and 600 artists will participate in Record 
Store Day activities that include in-store signings and performances, and the 
release of dozens of exclusive musical products.

"It has exploded," says Michael Kurtz of Music Monitor Network, an organizer of 
the event, which is sponsored by the National Association of Recording 
Merchandisers. "We touched a nerve. So many people are passionate about record 
stores. It's like how people feel about wine shops. We had no idea it would be 
that way, but it is and it's incredible."

Chris Cornell, Erykah Badu, Static-X, Queensryche, the Del McCoury Band and 
dozens of other artists will play intimate sets in stores. There are contests 
to win guitars from Silversun Pickups, Disturbed and Brian May.

Radiohead, My Morning Jacket, The Decemberists, Sonic Youth, Tom Waits, Bruce 
Springsteen, Bob Dylan and Leonard Cohen are among those who are putting out 
DVDs and recordings in unique packaging or limited editions, many with 
exclusive tracks, live performances and previously unreleased material. Lists 
of all products, participating stores and artist appearances can be found at 
recordstoreday.com.

Representatives of MMN, the Coalition of Independent Music Stores, Alliance of 
Independent Media Stores and Newbury Comics came up with the idea for the event 
at a meeting in Baltimore two years ago and held the first Record Store Day 
last April, kicked off by Metallica at Rasputin Music in San Francisco.

This year, the number of stores involved has grown fivefold, with more than 150 
related music releases.

"Back in the day, it was all about the vinyl and big images and posters and all 
kinds of cool stuff that came inside the packaging," Kurtz says. "We're 
bringing that back."

The Breeders' Kim Deal, who also plays bass for The Pixies, says she and her 
twin sister, Kelley, personally handscreened the artwork for her band's 
limited-edition (1,000 copies) vinyl Fate to Fatal EP, also available digitally 
at iTunes. They'll be making an in-store appearance at Shake It Records in 
Cincinnati. She says record stores, unlike mass-market retailers, are more than 
just a place to buy.

"They have the best haircuts and the worst attitudes," Deal says, laughing. "It 
almost used to be scary walking into a cool record store, because they were so 
judgmental and über-hip. But they did know a lot about music, whether they were 
making fun of what you were buying or not.

"You'd just go in to say, 'What's good?' "
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