This past Saturday afternoon was spent
like so many others before it, in one of my very favorite places on
earth. As I left the car and started to walk down a familiar street
in what has been dubbed "The Coolest Small Town In America"
I felt an excitement bordering on anxiety running through my
veins. I can't quite reach the front door fast enough, yet once I'm
three steps from the shop I instinctively slow down because I don't
want to seem too anxious. I open the door, step inside and
immediately calm down. I smell musty old vinyl records, incense
burning and I hear the old floor boards shifting beneath my feet. It
could be a hot summer day in 2017 or one back in 1987. Time is
irrelevant because either way, I'm home.
When I was a little girl way back in
1970-something I would spend plenty of time with my dad while my mom
worked nights. He worked for an up-and-coming rock radio station and
so much of my time with him revolved around music. Visiting his
friends while they were on air. Opening big boxes of brand new albums
and previewing them on the spot or running to a newsstand every
Friday to grab one of the only copies of Billboard magazine that they
would get in each week. Saturday afternoons were spent in a record
store- at first the little hole in the wall and then eventually in a
bigger chain. The smaller shops were always the best and before I
could even read I was flipping through albums and analyzing cover
art. Dad would be talking music with his buddies and I would be
running stuff by Blue Oyster Cult over to him because I loved the
colors of visuals
These trips went on for years until I
was way too old and far too cool to be caught dead with a parent.
Then I went to the record store by myself to buy a mixture of hair
band and freestyle dance music on cassette. Everything from
Whitesnake to Expose` was bumping through my Walkman and I never left
the house without some sort of music on me. It was my happy place, my
escape and my salvation I'll wrapped into one four minute and thirty
second song after another. Music was my normal and for years it never
really occurred to me that it was actually a gift and a language that
not everyone else spoke.
As I stand in front of tables full of
vinyl, I'm at peace. The kind that my dad must have felt all of those
years ago. The kind that you can't talk yourself into, it's either
gut level there or it's not. As I pour over bin after bin, all of my
real life problems seem to know better than to cut in. I'm left
present in the moment and somehow connected to all of the positive
things that come from melodies, harmonies and deep lyrics. Things
like hope, faith, connection, joy and a reminder to my dark little
heart that there is still an enormous amount of good in this world.
My dad taught me how to dig for album
gold and how to find comfort in something that is always, without
fail, there for each and every one of us. That need to belong and fit
in somewhere- it's always in the music. Most importantly, he showed
me the natural connections that form while looking for that elusive
record. The reality is anyone hanging over a bin of vinyl for more
than five minutes will intuitively understand how at least part of my
brain works, without us ever having a conversation. So why not have
that conversation? Music solidifies things before people even
exchange first names.
I know that vinyl has become the cool"
thing again and I love the fact that my teenagers are spinning
records even more than they are using a streaming service. I just
hope that once the trend cools off and Urban Outfitters stops pushing
the same record player in 25 colors, the love of vinyl continues with
a bunch of beautiful young faces to nurture it.
As a parent you instinctively
understand that it's your job to provide for and teach your kids the
things that they need to be decent and successful adults. As an older
parent that has settled into life, I understand now more than ever
that the biggest gifts that I have to give generally don't include a
monetary price tag. When I watch my kids flip through albums now I
wonder if years from now, they'll really get "it". Have I
unknowingly lead them towards a lifetime of emotional understanding
just as my father did me? No matter what your heart needs, it's in
the music, so you might as well dig in.