Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - September 20, 2020, Winnipeg, Manitoba
SUNDAY SPECIAL
A10 SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 20, 2020
SUNDAY SPECIAL EDITOR: KELLY TAYLOR ● KELLY.TAYLOR@FREEPRESS.MB.CA ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM
A CCORDING to a press release issued last week by the Recording Industry
Association of America, for the first
time since 1986 — the year songs
such as Madonna’s Papa Don’t
Preach, Peter Gabriel’s Sledgeham-
mer and Falco’s Rock Me Amadeus
were topping charts all over the
globe — sales of vinyl records out-
stripped sales of compact discs for
the initial six months of the year.
Hey, Mr. Mister, it wasn’t even
close. The RIAA report stated that
between January and June, audio-
philes doled out US$232.1 million
on vinyl albums as compared with
just less than US$130 million on
their digital counterparts. And
while that bit of news was music to
the ears of Planet of Sound owner
Dave Wright, it certainly didn’t
come as some big surprise.
“Vinyl is definitely on the upswing
and has been for a while, which is
precisely why we started carrying
it in the store about 10 years ago,”
says Wright, whose cosy, 800-square-
foot shop at 1109 Henderson Hwy.,
which stocks a healthy number of
LPs in addition to CDs, DVDs and
Blu-rays, even an assortment of
long-considered extinct LaserDiscs,
will celebrate its 20th anniversary in
November.
“It’s not just people who grew up
listening to vinyl, either,” he goes on,
sporting the office uniform: sneak-
ers, dark jeans and an aquamarine-
coloured, zip-up hoodie, the latter
of which only partially conceals a
well-worn, Joy Division T-shirt. “The
other day there was a gal in here
who I would have put at around 14.
She picked up the Tea Party’s Edges
of Twilight plus an album by the
Wallflowers, the one that had their
first big hit on it (we think he means
Bringing Down the Horse). As she
was taking out her debit card to pay
I was like, how do you even know
about these groups? Don’t they pre-
date you by at least 10 years?”
According to Wright, the
teen said she grew up listening to
the two bands, along with dozens of
others from the ’80s and ’90s, while
poking through her parents’ CD
shelves. Now that she was old enough
to start a music collection of her
own, she preferred to have copies on
vinyl, she said.
“I told her that was so good to
hear,” he says, standing in front of a
wall display boasting such rare gems
as a 1968 pressing of John Lennon
and Yoko Ono’s Two Virgins album
and — you’re getting verrrry sleepy
— Relax With Reveen, a spoken word
record by late master hypnotist Peter
J. Reveen. “Later I was thinking,
man, how cool is it that we get to be
a part of that experience? I mean,
I was right around her age when I
started buying music so to have that
come around full circle? It was a
great feeling, no doubt about it.”
● ● ●
Wright, a 45-year-old married fa-
ther of two, grew up on Brian Street
in North Kildonan, about 10 blocks
from where Planet of Sound now
rests. Like he mentioned, he was 14
or so when he spent his allowance on
music for the first time, picking up
pre-recorded cassette versions of —
“This first one is going to be embar-
rassing,” he cautions — Please Ham-
mer Don’t Hurt ’Em by MC Hammer
and Rank, a live set by English band
the Smiths from an outlet of the now
defunct HMV Canada in Kildonan
Place.
By the time he was in high school
he was catching the No. 11 bus prac-
tically every Saturday, to spend the
afternoon combing through down-
town music meccas such as Records
on Wheels and Pyramid Records.
After attaining a commerce degree
from the University of Manitoba, he
secured a manager’s job at Disc-Go-
Round, a new-and-used music shop
that had three locations in the city.
He remained there for three years
but left following a disagreement
with his boss over what he was being
paid or, more specifically, not being
paid. He decided to strike out on his
own while, in his words, he was still
young and stupid enough to do so.
Many times when he was riding
Transit Tom downtown to music-
shop, he wished there was a suitable
option closer to home. He decided to
remedy that situation by establish-
ing Planet of Sound — named after
a track on the Pixies’ 1991 release
Trompe le Monde — in November
2000 in a vacant space formerly oc-
cupied by an accounting firm.
“I didn’t have much in the store at
first, probably around 1,100 items
split between used CDs, VHS tapes
and DVDs, which were just coming
into vogue,” he says, pegging his
current inventory at around 30,000
units. “I fully admit it, those first few
years were tough. I was the only one
here. I worked 11 (a.m.) to 8 (p.m.)
seven days a week for basically no
pay because everything I made went
towards rent (for the store). Luckily
I have very supportive parents who,
more power to them, allowed me to
stay at home for as long as I needed
to.”
As stock increased so did sales. In
2010 he hosted a memorable, in-store
performance by iVardensphere, a
band from Edmonton well-known
in the industrial music scene, to
toast Planet of Sound’s 10th an-
niversary. He recalls wandering
across the street during the morning
sound check to gauge whether the
show’s volume was going to affect
neighbouring businesses or not.
“You could literally feel the ground
shaking from the bass but funnily
enough, nobody on the block com-
plained,” he says with a chuckle.
Actor/comedian Brian Posehn,
perhaps best known for his recur-
ring role as geologist Bert Kibbler
on long-running CBS series the Big
Bang Theory, is another famous face
who’s popped by. Asking himself
what would be the strangest thing
in the store he could get Posehn,
who was in the city performing
at Rumor’s Restaurant & Comedy
Club, to autograph, Wright fetched
an old Anne Murray album from a
dollar-bin. That explains why there
is a framed copy of Honey, Wheat &
Laughter on the wall near the cash
register with the greeting, “Dear
Planet of Sound, you rule super hard!
Brian Posehn” scribbled in black
marker upon its cover.
● ● ●
Like most independent music
store owners, not just in Winnipeg
but around the world, Wright was
already planning ahead for Record
Store Day, held annually on the third
Saturday in April, when he was
forced to shut down in mid-March
owing to COVID-19. He reopened
June 6 and is currently looking for-
ward to the second Record Store Day
of 2020. Because of the pandemic,
this year the annual celebration of
all-things-vinyl was expanded to
three days, Aug. 29, Sept. 26, and Oct.
24, after being initially postponed.
Not that flipping through this com-
ing weekend’s hotly anticipated re-
leases — they include the Ramones’
It’s Alive II, Tegan and Sara’s Tonight
in the Dark We’re Seeing Colors and
an alternate version of Fleetwood
Mac’s 1977 classic, Rumours — will
be anything close to normal, just yet.
“First of all we can only allow
five customers in the store at any
one time,” he says, noting while his
and wife Stephanie’s 14-year-old son
Lucas is more interested in video
games than music, their daughter
Annabel, 5, keeps a small pile of CDs
— some rockabilly, some classical
jazz, zero Sharon, Lois & Bram — on
her bedside table. “Also, for obvious
reasons, shoppers have to maintain
their distance. They can’t be stand-
ing shoulder to shoulder like they
did in the ‘old days,’ glancing over at
what the person next to them has in
their hand.”
That said, Wright acknowledges
there is probably nothing in the
store — not the David Bowie Pinups
picture disc, not the season 20 DVD
set of Law & Order: Special Victims
Unit, not even the Blu-Ray copy of
John Carpenter’s The Fog (along with
vinyl, horror flicks are far and away
his top sellers) — somebody couldn’t
track down on internet sites such
as eBay or Discogs in a matter of
seconds.
“At the end of the day, though, it all
comes down to the thrill of the hunt,”
he says, speaking loudly enough to
be heard over a Fiona Apple album
playing in the background. “There’s
nothing more satisfying than when
I’m standing at the till, minding my
own business, and I hear somebody
audibly gasp when they turn up
something they’ve been hunting for,
for who knows how long. It’s infec-
tious. Not only does it get them back
in the store a week or two later,
looking for something else on their
hit list, it’s what keeps me going, 20
years in.”
David Sanderson writes about Winnipeg-centric
restaurants and businesses.
david.sanderson@freepress.mb.ca
The vinyl countdown...
Planet of Sound is in its own orbit around the world of music
DAVID SANDERSON
‘At the end of the day,
though, it all comes down
to the thrill of the hunt.
There’s nothing more
satisfying than when
I’m standing at the till,
minding my own business,
and I hear somebody
audibly gasp when they turn
up something they’ve been
hunting for, for who knows
how long. It’s infectious.’
— Planet of Sound owner Dave Wright
Photography by Mike Deal
Winnipeg Free Press
Listen to the music
Dave Wright’s Planet of Sound isn’t the only store sell-
ing vinyl records that is toasting its 20th anniversary
in 2020. Championship Vinyl, the fictional record
shop that served as the backdrop of the 2000 film
High Fidelity, starring John Cusack, also turns the big
Two-O, this year.
Tonearms up if you remember the scene from that
flick when Jack Black, as record store clerk Barry Judd,
responds, “Do we look like the kind of store that sells
I Just Called to Say I Love You? Go to the mall,” after
a customer inquires if the shop carries a copy of the
Stevie Wonder smash single. Wright recalls that bit
of dialogue, for sure, but assures a reporter neither
he nor any of his three staff members would ever
respond in such a manner if someone were to come
into Planet of Sound looking for a title by, say, Kenny G
or Barry Manilow.
“Sure, there might be some healthy ribbing with
certain customers we know to have a sense of humour
but no, we pass no judgment here, whatsoever,” he
says, naming Depeche Mode’s Violator, from 1990,
as his fave album, all-time. “To me, music is music,
whether it’s blues, disco, punk or whatever. It’s all
good.”
When asked about another scene from High Fidelity,
the one where John Cusack’s character boasts he can
sell five copies of a record by the Beta Band, simply
by playing it for shoppers, Wright nods his head yes,
saying similar scenarios have occurred at his locale
from time to time.
“This is my current Beta Band,” he says, holding up
a copy of Bleached Wavves, a three-month-old release
by Canadian outfit Zoon. “This guy (Daniel Monkman)
is literally from Selkirk. Every time I put it on people
are like, ‘What is that? Can I buy it?’ ”
Wright asked actor/comedian Brian Posehn to sign a copy of Anne Murray’s Honey,
Wheat & Laughter that now hangs on the wall by the cash register.
Band stickers cover a filing cabinet near the cash-register.
When Planet of Sound opened,
it was primarily selling CDs,
DVDs and VHS tapes. Vinyl was
added about 10 years ago and is
now a big part of sales.
Planet of Sound owner Dave Wright holds the Pixies album Trompe le Monde that has the Henderson Highway store’s namesake song on it. Wright says ‘vinyl is definitely on the upswing and has been for a while.’
Store manager Cathie Stankey
organizes some CDs.
Owner Dave Wright
and store manager
Cathie Stankey
outside Planet of
Sound on Henderson
Highway.
Planet of Sound is marking its 20th anniversary in November and it has LPs (left), DVDs and Blu-rays (centre), CDs (right), and even some LaserDiscs in its 800-square-foot space.
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