“A lot of us (DJs) kind of started at the same time and we all kind of grew together. Some I would just see in the record shops fighting over records or whatever. Hustling to try and get the latest import - actually, we don't have that anymore. I miss that. We don't have that kind of community where you just hang out and chill. Like I could spend hours in the record shop just chilling - there was a certain happiness, like a joviality to just being in as a punter and seeing certain regulars coming in again. I'd never thought of it like that before, but they were actually really good meeting hubs.” WAYNE C MCDONALD Newcastle
The Documentary Film
Contributors include Trevor
Nelson, Marcia Carr, Claudia Wilson, Ammo Talwar MBE, DJSS, DJ Rap, Jazzie B,
DJ Spoony, Wookie and Jeff Smith and Simon Dunmore. Produced by Simon
‘Schooly’ Phillips, the film will premiere at The University of
Greenwich on the 26 October before being screened at
independent cinemas, including Leicester’s Phoenix cinema on the 31 October
and will later be released online.
“There were very few women
in these spaces. I remember a girl called Maria, she and I worked at Unity
Records. And that was in the mid 90s. One or two women would come in, but
again, it's just very unusual to find us in those spaces. It's just always
guys. It's like Willy Wonka finding the golden ticket to get the opportunity to
be working in those stores. I saw as a privilege. And it was like a rite of
passage almost for me, because not anybody could get a job in those stores. So
that's why I enjoyed the moment. The pay was crap, though. I used to get paid
in records. Not actual wages, records. Get paid in records. And then if I did
get paid some wages, I'd use my wages to buy more records. I just thought ‘I
need this tune that's in the brown paper bag under the counter’.” MARCIA CARR London
The documentary film is part of
a wider project, which will also deliver a website, book, podcast series and
KS3 education pack.
2Funky Arts Director
Vijay Mistry said: “This
has been our first national project, and we have been thrilled by the response
– interviewing around 80 people and digging deep into this history. 2Funky Arts
grew from 2Funky Records (1997-2012) – a specialist Black music store in
Leicester, with an international reputation. So, we have first-hand experience
of these shops as cultural powerhouses.”
Further information: www.theblackmusicrecordshop.
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