Record Store Day is usually celebrated in Canada, the U.S., the U.K. and various other countries on the third Saturday in April. That would be today. But because of the coronavirus pandemic, it has been postponed to June 20, somewhere around the summer solstice as well as being my late brother's birthday. You will find the details of Canada's celebration here:

https://recordstoredaycanada.ca

It's a kind of worldwide celebration of the vinyl revival, with many unique special releases scheduled for the day.

I'm really not confident that we'll be fully able to celebrate the occasion even once June 20 rolls around. But a partial celebration is possible even today. Most of the planned special releases are already available - you'll just have to be a little more creative about how you get your hands on them. It will have to be curb side pickup or else to-your-door (or mailbox) delivery. The creative content that's pressed onto the vinyl - some of it, anyway - may well be available through your computer, tablet or smartphone.

The celebration will be muted for sure. One of the special releases, for example, is a multi-album set by John Prine, who recently died after falling victim to Covid-19.

Beyond the records themselves, there is also an impressive array of souvenir merch, bumpf, swag, call it what you will, available for online ordering from the site - things like T-shirts and tote-bags.

One of my pandemic projects is to sort through my own record collection, which I haven't added to since CDs became widely available. I HAVE listened to a number of them lately and I know I want to hang on to some, which I doubt will ever be commercially available in CD form. I also have a device which transcribes LPs (or 45s, for that matter) on to blank CDs; I may use that too, at least selectively.

So many projects I can think of to tackle. Who knows how much time there is to complete them?
There have been a lot of occasions lately that I could have posted entries about. Saturday of last weekend was Record Store Day. I didn't mark the day in any way but I did go to a BIFHSGO meeting up at Centrepointe. Maggie Wheeler was the featured guest speaker, talking about her latest book in the "Lost Villages" series of mysteries - fictional mysteries occurring during the late 1950s when the villages around present-day Iroquois and Morrisburg were deliberately flooded to make way for the St. Lawrence Seaway. Some homes and businesses were physically moved to new locations; others weren't and in some cases couldn't be. So the inhabitants quite literally couldn't go home again.

But the latest mystery in the series, All My Worldly Goods, also relates to the Home Children. One of Maggie Wheeler's grandmothers was a home child. I'm looking forward to reading the book (as well as the next and probably final book in the series, as yet unreleased) but first I'm working my way through some library books, including Rosemary Rutley's Voices from the Lost Villages.

Another event from last weekend was the Mutchmor School book sale, which we happened upon on Sunday during our annual foray to pick up hot cross buns at the Wild Oat. It was during the last couple of hours of the sale. Normally I like to go to a book sale like that shortly after it opens, but there is certainly something to be said for going near the end as well. It was somewhat picked over, but we still came away with a one-bag haul ($10 worth of books) and we were able to get around the tables without tripping over people and boxes! And speaking of hot cross buns... for the first time this year, we sampled the HCBs from the vegan & gluten-free bakery off Wellington Street (close to the Bagel Shop which sadly is downsizing, though it's good news that it will continue to exist); at $3.50 apiece, they were certainly pricey, and I can't really recommend them. They had a rather sawdusty texture although the cinnamon in them redeemed them somewhat. I suppose if I were actually on a gluten-free and vegan diet I might buy them again, but I rather suspect it's mostly the gluten that gives HCBs their familiar texture.

So moving on to this weekend... Saturday was 4/20, which for several decades has been a day to celebrate cannabis; this year is something of a landmark year as it's the first year that recreational cannabis has been legal in Canada. I didn't participate in the festivities in any way - I'm still waiting on legal edibles and then we'll see! Today, April 22, is Earth Day.

I've mentioned before that April has never been one of my favourite months. My mother and my mother-in-law both died in April, as did one of the two cats we acquired after the death of my mother-in-law (in fact, he died over the Easter weekend two years ago, when unsurprisingly our regular vet was not available).

And yet, this Easter weekend has on the whole been a good one. Saturday evening we had dinner with our kids & grandkids and then babysat the latter while our daughter did a show in Wakefield. Spring has arrived and although Friday and Saturday were dull and rainy, Easter Sunday was nicer and today nicer still - and a balmy 20 degrees! We had our first backyard barbecue of the season and also walked over to the park, where kids were out in full force on the play structures. And for once, I didn't spend Easter weekend filling in income tax forms - my tax refund of a few hundred dollars is already sitting patiently in my account awaiting further instructions from me!

So while there are still a few ghosts - my dad always used to make the rounds of the Ottawa-based kids & grandkids with Easter baskets and boxes of Turtles (the edible type, even for vegetarians) - it's fascinating to watch the next generation growing and flourishing as well.
Yesterday, April 19, was Record Store Day. It started, I believe, about seven years ago, though "vinyl" has been making a comeback for some time. I'm not quite sure what to make of it all.

On the one hand, it's rather nice to see an ever-growing group of people thumbing their noses at the phenomenon of obsolescence of formats, including some that were generally considered technologically and sonically superior: think Beta videotapes and reel-to-reel audiotape. And on the other hand? Well, LP's will never be as portable as CDs, cassettes, MP3s, sound waves or brain waves and I don't think the convenient and portable formats will go away any time soon.

LPs certainly gave rise to some gorgeous and highly creative cover art. Sergeant Pepper. King Crimson. The Stones album with the real-life zipper on it. And then there were the defiantly minimalist covers like the Beatles white album. The size of the covers meant there was ample room on the back for liner notes, as well as inside for other interesting inserts. And sometimes the vinyl and the label on it were works of art in themselves!

What about sound quality? I must say that when I first heard CDs, I thought they had a certain "boxed in" sound to them. I don't know that this was in any way connected to whether they were full "DDD" as opposed to "ADD" or "AAD" or whatever. I think maybe in removing some of the scratchy and other imperfections, they removed some of the "good" sound at the same time. And many of the early CDs I got would have skips or loopabouts that I couldn't repair. The later ones have been much more reliable. Is it preferable to have the needle-noise you get with LPs, or is that just making a virtue of necessity? I will say that when the Beatles complete albums box came out some years ago, I didn't queue up to get it in the supposedly more authentic mono format rather than in stereo.

On Record Store Day, participating record stores have a few special releases just for the occasion. They seem to have all the cachet of those under-the-counter "bootleg" albums we used to get in the sixties and seventies. It's a nice idea, but I don't think I'd go out of my way to get my hands on one - when EVERYTHING's a collector's item, then nothing is!

One of my planned retirement projects is to sort through my LP collection. Some of them likely never will be available commercially as CDs. I do have a device that converts LPs to CD format, so I'll have to start using that, once I decide which ones I want to convert. And I want to start actually playing the LPs occasionally, and maybe start identifying what it is about their sound that I like or don't like. I notice that craft stores like Michaels actually sell LP-sized picture frames now for displaying that great cover art (but then what do you do with the record itself??)

So much vinyl, so little time...
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