AMOEBA PRESS
Check out this archive of articles about Amoeba Music!
  1. *
    October 5, 2009
    The Insider: Los Angeles
  2. *
    May 29, 2009
    Playboy's A-List: America's Coolest Stores
  3. *
    April 17, 2009
    America's 15 Best Indie Record Stores
  4. *
    February 10, 2009
    Let Music Take You To the Record Store
  5. *
    October 12, 2008
    Comic by Mimi Pond for The Times
  6. *
    April 24, 2008
    The Best of Rock 2008: Best Record Stores
  7. *
    March 1, 2008
    The 64 Greatest Things about LA
  8. *
    February 16, 2008
    Amoeba Records Names Sierra Club's Angeles Chapter As A Charity of Choice for 2007!
  9. *
    December 1, 2007
    Buy, Sell, Trade. Amoeba Remains The Relevant Record Store
  10. *
    October 1, 2007
    Metal Meccas: Los Angeles' Amoeba Music
  11. *
    February 5, 2007
    Eschewing MP3s for a Modern Music Bazaar
  12. *
    January 25, 2007
    In the Classical Aisle
  13. *
    February 17, 2005
    Amoeba Music's Simple Formula
  14. *
    July 27, 2003
    Indie Record Stores Surviving: Finding Unique Ways to Lure, Keep Customers.
  15. *
    July 20, 2003
    From A Store With 300,000 Titles, A Big Lessson
  16. *
    May 16, 2002
    At Indie Music Shop, A Guide Via MP3's
  17. *
    January 10, 2002
    The Roving Eye: You Mean Max Kaminsky In On CD?
  18. *
    November 1, 2001
    Amoeba Music
  19. *
    February 19, 1998
    The World’s Greatest Record Store?
SPIN.com
April 17, 2009
America's 15 Best Indie Record Stores
SPIN's editors celebrate Record Store Day with our list of the top places to discover great music.
By Abigail Everdell and Charles Aaron

In honor of the second annual Record Store Day on April 18, we talked to SPIN contributors and trusted friends around the country to come up with the best general-interest music shops that America has to offer. Because, let's be honest, spending too many hours on the Internet fizzes your brain and dims your eyesight. But devoting hours to a great record store rejuvenates. Ask the opinion of the right people (they’re right there behind the counter), and you can come out enlightened, possibly with new friends, carrying a record you’ve never heard of that might blow your mind, with a big fucking smile on your face. And who doesn't want that?

NOTE: We tried to narrow our list to a Top 10, but were pleasantly surprised to find 15 stores we loved -- plus a group of 15 more worthy of honorable mention. (To keep our list manageable, we excluded stores that specialize in specific genres like jazz and blues.) Read on for the countdown of our Top 15 picks -- plus, testimonials from fans who frequent them.

(To see the full list, read the article here)

1. AMOEBA
6400 Sunset Boulevard in Hollywood, 1855 Haight Street in San Francisco, and 2455 Telegraph Avenue in Berkeley, California

Why It Rocks:  Amoeba Records, with locations in Berkeley, San Francisco, and Hollywood, isn't just the "World's Largest Independently Owned Record Store" as their topflight website proudly declares, it represents a sort of music lovers' heavenly refuge. Their vast, bright warehouse spaces house massive, constantly shifting new and used stock (more than 100,000 titles per store), painstakingly curated into ultra-specific, world-spanning genre sections. Factor in a mind-blowing history of in-stores (browse their online video gallery for a taste), and it's no surprise that a majority of people, when asked about great record stores in the U.S., respond with "Oh, like Amoeba?"

Fans Say:  "There's something really soothing about rows and rows (and rows) of vinyl, just waiting to be flipped through, and when you hear that satisfying flip-flip-chunk sound of diggers, it's almost like hearing a great minimalist electronica record or something. Add to that the clattering of those plastic CD protector things, and it's like a little symphony. Amoeba feels like church, if church was fun." -- Josh Modell (managing editor, The Onion AV Club and SPIN contributing writer)

"I went to Amoeba for the first time when I was 15 and I almost passed out. I could have spent $200, and I didn't have $200." -- Joe Gross (pop-music critic, the Austin American-Statesman)

Spin Article - 15 Best Indie Record Stores    Spin Article - 15 Best Indie Record Stores
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