
Hundreds turned out for the Opening Event and DJ party on Wednesday night for “The Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl.” Visitors had the chance to meet artists William Cordova, Harrison Haynes, Taiyo Kimura, Tim Lee, David McConnell, Mingering Mike, Fatimah Tuggar and Lyota Yagi.

Together, the guys of Bull City Boys’ Night have collected tens of thousands of records. They never gave up vinyl, like I did, for cassettes, CDs and then MP3s. Throughout dinner, the record references flew. “That’s a bigger pizza than I thought!” one of them said. “Is that 12 inches? Is that a record album?”

A family friend decimated, destroyed and devastated my mother’s record collection by sitting on dozens of 78 shellac discs spread out on the couch next to her phonograph in our front room. There may have been less than three records that survived that fateful Sunday sitdown. From that time on, I’ve been most protective of my sounds. — Barkley L. Hendricks

We just could not resist sharing this hilarious photo album from Huffington Post.
“With everything from 7-piece family bands with matching outfits, to creepy puppets and gay dogs, we searched the Internet high and low to find these baffling vinyl covers,” writes Katla McGlynn. “Which is the most ridiculous? Take a look and vote for your favorite!”

“How to pirate a vinyl record,” on Synthgear.com, a DIY method to copy a vinyl record, making a copy that you can actually play on a turntable

When I asked Nathaniel Knox how many “sides” (LP’s) he had, he answered sixty, and I said “Wow!” He then said that was just a drop in the bucket. I was in the 10th or 11th grade and had perhaps twenty or so that I shared with my brother in our so-called collection.

Durham-based artist/musician Harrison Haynes has been working hard this year. In addition to recording an album with his band Les Savy Fav, the artist has designed two album covers and collaborated with Superchunk’s Mac McCaughan.

The August issue of Wax Poetics — the record collectors’ bible — is hitting stands now. Inside is a six-page spread on the upcoming exhibition, “The Record: Contemporary Art and Vinyl” in which five artists from the show write about one of their favorite records.