>I am curious too about this... I no longer have a turntable nor a desire 
>to but have a big box full of my old LPs in the basement that I am 
>debating what to do with...

Me too. I should walk them down the street to Orpheus. Oh my, I guess he 
is not buying...


"Orpheus Records as we've known it is gone, over, kaput. If you shopped 
here in the 70's, 80's, 90's or up through 2007 you knew a store that had 
more records than any sane retailer would stock. Then, our lease ended. 
Our landlord informed us that our lease would not be renewed and that we 
had until April 1, 2008 to vacate the premises. 

SO, January 1, 2008 we commenced our "Going Out of Business" sale. The 
first week was modest, probably because the only notice was a small sign 
on our door. THEN, we put up a huge banner. A banner so large that people 
saw it a block a way. A banner so large that the county inspectors saw 
it. It turns out you need a permit for said banner, who knew? We paid our 
bux, but it was WELL worth it because the response was immediate and 
overwhelming. People I hadn't seen in the store in years came in to tell 
me how much they would miss the place. 

While here, most would buy a stack of lps. I'll never know how many were 
buying because they wanted the albums and how many were simply nostalgic, 
but it didn't really matter. What mattered was that the lps were 
disappearing much more quickly than I ever imagined. The only thing more 
amazing than how many records we were selling was how many more we still 
had. 

Then as luck would have it , the Washington Post ran a story about the 
closing of the store. A big piece, with a Bigger picture. Again the 
response was immediate and, you guessed it, overwhelming. I spent the 
better part of this past year overwhelmed. As April approached, I 
enquired of the landlord whether the new tenant was ready, and let him 
know I was interested in staying, for as long as possible. As many of you 
know that was LAST April. Now, as a new April approaches, I'm still 
asking the same question every month. And SO FAR every month the same 
answer comes back. "You can stay another month". If I try to push for 
more, I'm gently reminded that I have no lease and am free to go. 

Most of you reading this, are, probably, the same people, that are still 
coming in the store, and have lived the entire experience with me. So 
here we are. We will be here to enjoy our tenth anniversary in Clarendon. 
An anniversary that I have joked about, but never really expected to see. 

I told the landlord I didn't want to be one of those retailers who got 
tossed out, only to drive by the space a year or more later and see it 
sitting empty. To his credit, and my perseverance, we're still here. 
Merely a shadow of our former selves, but, still here. 

The liquidation sale was a resounding success. I was interviewed by City 
Papers' Jason Cherkis the other day, and we agreed, "going out of 
business" is a great business plan. I just want to reassure every one, 
this wasn't a contrived plan. It's just the way it happened...and I've 
got the letters from the landlord to prove it. I'm now paying my rent to 
the new tenants, that, similarly to the buildings owner, are allowing me 
to stay ONE MONTH AT A TIME. 

Astonishingly, I still have enough merchandise to remain in business, 
albeit in a truncated fashion. so, for now, I'll open the store a few 
days a week and persevere until it just doesn't make any sense to do 
it...anymore. Thank you for your support, thank you for your patience and 
most importantly, thank you for getting all those damn records out of 
here!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!"

http://www.orpheusrecords.com/shop/home.php/


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