Kagatan 29 sale at Ali Mall is proof of
vinyl records’ continued resurgence
by rick olivares
Kagatan 29, the quarterly vinyl
record sale in Cubao and held for the first time inside a mall -- Ali Mall to
be exact – from December 1-2 proved to be a smashing success.
Previously held at the bohemian
and artistic enclave of Cubao X, event organizer, DJ Arbie Bulaong who last
November opened a second branch of his vastly successful Treskul Record shop at
the Alley X area of Ali Mall, was asked by mall management if he would like to
hold the record sale at the atrium area. “This is our second time in our 29
staging
And it wasn’t bad. The sale drew
a lot of new faces; the kind you will not see at the Kagatan sales at Cubao X,
the November Hi-Fi Show, or even Record Store Day. “For one, we’re in a high
traffic area and there are a lot of curious passersby,” observed Bulaong.
“Unlike in Cubao X, na kailangan mong dayuhin because you are going to the
event, here sa Ali Mall, you have the incidental buyer. And it is nice to see
there are a lot of new faces.”
Al Rivera, of Bear’s Den Records,
one of the event exhibitors, noted that there were a lot of female faces in the
crowd that kept all sellers busy throughout the first of the two-day sale. “It
cannot just be an older demographic,” Rivera pointed out. “It is nice to see
younger people and female buyers. Meron mga customers nagsasabi na “mabuti
bumabalik ang vinyl. Marami nahikayat dito sa sale sa Ali Mall. Plus, the
cooler confines of the mall help.”
And just what was popular among
the Saturday crowd of buyers that also included several foreigners who are now
residents of Manila?
“Queen!” offered Erwin Ursua of
Vinylhead Records. The recent Queen film (Bohemian Rhapsody) saw the now
defunct-British band surge once more in popularity with albums such as Sheer
Heart Attack, Live Killers, and The Game being snapped up during the Saturday
sale. “Of course, New Wave bands remain popular as do OPM albums.”
“I had this guy buy a Pedicab
album for himself,” said Rivera. “He was also looking for Up Dharma Down’s
Capacities which is in demand. But he also bought a Carpenters and Frank
Sinatra record for his wife. So it is interesting to see that the two of them
are into music and vinyl.”
Rico J. Puno records were being
hunted down (following the OPM legend’s passing away last month) as were Juan
Dela Cruz Band albums.
Aside from the vinyl, compact
discs, and cassettes, another popular feature of Kagatan 29 was a locally
manufactured record cleaning solution, Dooo-Weez-Ooze. The product’s
manufacturer, Francis Dewey Santos, a music and recent vinyl convert said that
concocting his own cleaner came about due to his concerns about maintenance for
such expensive products such as records. “Our product was borne out of necessity
and I was actually surprised to see that it received such positive feedback
from local audiophiles,” bared Santos.
His Dooo-Weez-Ooze has even
received interest from foreign music fans except that he has yet to figure out
how best to ship them given concerns about liquids being transported abroad. I
am studying my options in promoting this product
“I think the new faces are proof
that the popularity and demand for vinyl records continues to grow,” summed up
Bulaong. “And given the response and turnout so far, I think we will do this
again here in Ali Mall.”
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