House of Records Owner Keeps the Past Alive, the Present Groovy and the Future Exciting
By: Ian Valleau - Reporter
EUGENE, Ore. – Record shops seem to have seem to have defeated what few have beaten, father time. Despite music moving from records, to cassettes, to CDs, to iPods and now to streaming services, vinyl has always resurfaced in popularity. The popularity comes from collectors, listeners and people who do both. Some people use them to spin the tracks on their record player, while others use them to hang on their wall for decoration.
This popularity does not just naturally happen though. People need to keep it alive. If there was nobody who deeply cared about records, it would fade off like other forms of music have. In Eugene, that deep care for records comes from House of Records owner Greg Sutherland.
Ho
By: Tony Adamo - Reporter
EUGENE, Ore. – Record shops seem to have seem to have defeated what few have beaten, father time. Despite music moving from records, to cassettes, to CDs, to iPods and now to streaming services, vinyl has always resurfaced in popularity. The popularity comes from collectors, listeners and people who do both. Some people use them to spin the tracks on their record player, while others use them to hang on their wall for decoration.
This popularity does not just naturally happen though. People need to keep it alive. If there was nobody who deeply cared about records, it would fade off like other forms of music have. In Eugene, that deep care for records comes from House of Records owner Greg Sutherland.