Record Store Day 2016



A couple of months ago, I saw a rare vinyl picture disc copy of one of my favourite albums of all time (Bloc Party’s Silent Alarm) on eBay. I didn’t own a record player, but as there were only 500 copies of this particular item, I felt obliged to put a bid in for it. Fast-forward a week and all of a sudden I was effectively the proud owner of quite an expensive and oversized coaster. I’d been contemplating getting involved in the vinyl music scene for a while, and this was the impetus I needed to really start exploring a different format for my music collection. Chloe amazingly got me a sweet record player as a late birthday present (this one by Crosley), along with a few more of my favourite albums to boost my fledgling collection, and overnight I’ve become one of those guys…

So what does one do when they have a newfound love of collecting records? One forces their girlfriend to get up at 3am and get in the queue at Rise Bristol a whopping five hours before they open their doors for Record Store Day 2016, that’s what!

If you’ve never heard of it before, Record Store Day is an international event that aims to promote the sale of vinyl, but more importantly it triumphs the independent music shops that are suffering so much from the rise of things like iTunes, Spotify and Amazon. Every year, bands and artists make some limited run records, either of music that they’ve already released or brand new songs/albums that are exclusively available in the independent shops on Record Store Day. In addition to selling limited edition records, many of the participating vendors arrange performances from live acts throughout the day and turn it into a real event.

I didn’t really realise how big of a thing Record Store Day was until the day before, when I went in to Rise to find out what the deal was (having never previously participated in it). When I thought that I’d be able to stroll in as they opened and grab the three records I wanted, I was given a rude awakening when I was told that they had only six copies of one of the three I was after, and that there were 180 people in the queue by the time they opened last year. Some frantic googling later (with help from Chloe) and I’d come to realise that if I wanted a good chance at owning one of the 500 copies of Slaves’ Extended Album in existence, I would need to be in the queue by about 4am!

(Image Credit: We Art You)
(Image Credit: Independent)
(Image Credit: Norman Records)
These are the three records I was after

The two of us dragged ourselves out of bed and into the car at an unspeakable hour, and were stood outside the record shop at 04:10 – just in time to watch the last people going home from their nights out. Loads of them seemed to think we were queuing for Subway, and there were a couple of entertaining incidents including someone falling over in front of us and the horrendously awkward end to a one night stand! At 6am, we were all let inside the cafĂ© beneath the record shop, which was extremely welcome for us after two hours stood in the cold, but one absolute nutter had been stood outside since 10pm!!!

So keen for Subway

The cool posters the coffee shop had to promote the day

There were loads of people there even by 6:30!

When the time finally came to let us in to buy music, we were seriously nervous. Being numbers 28 and 29 in the queue there was a distinct possibility that all three records I was after would be sold out, as the highest number of stock that the shop had for any of them was only 18 copies! Luckily however, all three were available and Chloe even opted to get them for herself as well – hopefully this inspires her to start her own Vinyl collection! I don’t really know what I’d have done if I’d queued that early and gone home empty handed, so I’m very glad that the morning wasn’t a waste for us!

(Image Credit: @FriskaFood)
Just to show how many people were crammed in before it even opened!

Tired but chuffed with the morning's work!


Did you get involved in Record Store Day this year? What do you think about Vinyl in general?

Gamin' Away

I’m back bitches, and this time I’m actually planning on sticking around!

This weekend just gone I went to the #LeedXmasMeet with Chloe and I genuinely enjoyed myself much more than I thought I would – especially once I’d gotten over the fact that I made up a third of the testosterone in the room! The event has definitely inspired me to blog more so here I am, blogging more.

You see, I didn’t realise this before but the point of blogging is to write about what you want to, not what you think might get read by the people that follow you on Twitter. In keeping with this new motto, here’s a nerdy twist on the “What I’m watching on Netflix” type post:

What I’m Playing

On Black Friday, my delightful girlfriend bought me a PS4 to waste my evenings on, and waste them I have! Here’s what I’ve been playing in all of my spare time.

LittleBigPlanet 3

Ok so while I, like most other 20-something year old males, will always enjoying shooting people in the face over the Internet with a sub-machine gun and the power of the respawn, this cutesy 2D platformer is probably my favourite PS4 game so far. In it, you play as Sackboy, a loveable knitted creature that doesn’t have a lot to say as you leap and bound around the lovingly handcrafted levels. A big draw to the game for me is how everything looks like it’s been cut, stitched and glued together in order to create what you see on screen, and you can interact with the materials exactly as you would if they were real (so you can grab onto the sponge dangling from a rope to swing across chasms, or slide down slippery glass ramps).

It's so colourful and fun! (Image Credit: The Independent)

The game has a big focus on customisation, so you can dress up Sackboy as anything from Iron Man to a ballerina, or leave stickers everywhere you go as you saunter through each stage. The best part of this though is the fact that you can create your own levels using exactly the same tools and objects that the developers do and share them online without needing a degree in Computer Science or any kind of coding knowledge at all. Personally, I suck at this part, but because the world wide web is so wonderful, you can go online and play through some truly astonishing user-created gems that no normal person will ever understand how it works; honestly, when I see people make fully realised versions of Fallout 4 as a 2D platformer using the exact same tools that are available to me, I have to wonder why I struggle to stick a wheel onto something and make a basic car.

I was a big fan of the previous two instalments of the series but the new features in the third one (such as the three new characters with unique abilities or the sweet new powerups) are not so much a step as a clear stride forward. I will definitely be playing this for a while! (PS it's narrated by Stephen Fry and stars Hugh Laurie, just sayin').

Star Wars Battlefront

With the new film just around the corner (10 days, but who’s counting eh?), EA has absolutely capitalised on my childhood nostalgia by pumping out a Star Wars shoot-em-up. It’s pretty fun running around as a member of the rebel alliance or tossing people around as Darth Vader, but if I’m honest, this game’s not a patch on the PS2 versions that I used to play back in the day. There’s nowhere near as much variety in this one. For example, the PS4 game ignores the Prequel Trilogy, which most Star Wars fans would normally be happy about, but for this game it means you don’t get the option to leap around the maps as Darth Maul and man oh man was that fun. Switching between character types is also a lot more cumbersome than it used to be, which means there is a lot less variety in the troop composition of the competing armies and subsequently much less of a need for teamwork.

Ah shite... (Image Credit: Forbes)


The game modes on offer, whilst I haven’t played all of them yet, don’t offer the classic Battlefront thrills or the strategy that was involved in trying to beat the enemy off the field through capturing the command posts. As well as this, I’m really not a fan of the lack of a story mode, or rather the fact that most of the game is relatively soulless online multiplayer. Some of my fondest memories from my childhood are playing through the campaign or galactic conquest modes in marathon split screen sessions with a buddy, and the lack of that capability in this version makes me sad.

That being said however, Star Wars is Star Wars, so I’m still having fun playing the game. It’s not as good as the classic PS2 titles, but I think that kind of experience from the developers of multiplayer shooter specialists DICE was never going to materialise.

FIFA 16

This is essentially a must-have for me and my group of friends as we absolutely love taking each other on on the virtual pitch. This latest edition has some really interesting new features – famously the inclusion of the Women’s International Teams but my favourite new feature is the addition of individual training drills for your players in Manager Career mode as I love taking a promising young player and turning him into a Ballon D’Or winner. I also like to create a dream team and cement Liverpool’s place as the absolutely undisputed best team in the world, which I am busying myself with each night.

Rocket League

If you’ve not played Rocket League and own a PS4 then frankly you’re doing it wrong because it’s ridiculously entertaining and ever so silly. The basic premise is that you play up to 4v4 football with rocket powered cars and a giant ball, but the speed with which the game is played leads to some frantic goal line clearances and absolutely phenomenal goals; which only adds to the fun!

No-one in this picture knows what the fuck is going on (Image credit: PushSquare)



So there you have it, the games that I’m playing at the moment. Do you have any recommendations for what I should get next?
© Philoslothical

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