Rasputin Music
Rasputin Music is the largest independent chain of record stores in the San Francisco Bay Area, California. It was founded as "Rasputin Records" in 1971 in Berkeley, California by entrepreneur Ken Sarachan. It is named after 19th-century Russian religious figure Grigori Rasputin.
Industry | Record Stores |
---|---|
Predecessor | Rasputin Records |
Founded | 1971Berkeley, California, United States | in
Founder | Ken Sarachan |
Area served | San Francisco Bay Area, California |
Website | Official website |
Rasputin Music currently operates three locations around the Bay Area: the flagship Berkeley store at 2401 Telegraph Avenue, Campbell,[1] and Pleasant Hill. There are also two locations in the Central Valley cities of Modesto, and Fresno. The Stockton location closed May 6, 2016. Newark, and Fairfield closed their doors on March 24, 2019.[2] The San Lorenzo store closed its doors in March 2020, but hopes to relocate.
History
The original Rasputin Music store was located at 2523 Durant Avenue where Sweetheart Café & Tea is located. They moved to Telegraph Avenue in the space formerly occupied by Blondie's Pizza, now Abe's Pizza, which was also owned by Ken Sarachan. Rasputin moved across the street into a larger space when Odyssey Records went out of business. In the late 1970s it split into two separate locations, with one store specializing in rock music and the other in soul, jazz and other music genres. In July 1982, a fire at next-door Steve the Greek's restaurant destroyed the soul and jazz store. Rasputin's Berkeley operations were then consolidated into a single location. It currently operates at the corner of Telegraph Avenue and Channing Way.
Although in recent years its prices have become more commensurate with those of other music stores, Rasputin was known for offering low prices on new and used CDs, DVDs, and vinyl records compared to other Berkeley music stores like Leopold and Tower Records. Its selection of new vinyl is unusually rich, as is its selection of used CDs and DVDs.
Rasputin occasionally features in-store performances by top musicians and bands. Metallica made its first in-store appearance in almost a decade at the Rasputin Mountain View store as part of the April 19, 2008 "Record Store Day".[3] Metallica also performed there on record store day in 2016.
Ken Sarachan Business Practices and Properties
Ken Sarachan is considered a controversial figure in Berkeley because of the apparent neglect of several properties he owns on Telegraph Avenue. The Blondie's Pizza on Telegraph is now called Abe's, owned by long-time Blondie's employee Abdul Zaloukh. His other businesses and properties include Bear Basics and Anastasia's Vintage Clothing. After much planning and negotiation with the city, Mad Monk Center for Anachronistic Media opened in April 2016, a 10,000 sq ft book and record store with plans to open a cafe and become an event venue. It abruptly closed permanently on February 26, 2018.[4] He also owns 2503 and 2509 Haste and an empty lot at 2501 Haste Street.
The lot at 2501 Haste was the site of a former single room occupancy hotel which catered to low-income residents. It was damaged beyond repair by fires in 1986 and 1990.[5] The lot has been vacant for over 25 years and is the subject of innumerable blight complaints. It was purchased in 1991 in an apparent attempt to prevent the expansion or move of the Amoeba Music to the address. According to Aaron Cometbus in issue 51 of Cometbus, The Loneliness of the Electric Menorah, Sarachan personally delivered more than a million dollars to the property owner in a suitcase to buy the lot out from under Amoeba and the developer.[6] In 2005, Sarachan filed plans to build an apartment and retail complex on the site,[5] but these never came to fruition. The City of Berkeley has offered incentives to build on the site, including waiving $640,000 in liens and interest if Sarachan builds retail space and affordable housing.[7] In January 2012, the City of Berkeley sued Sarachan over the property.[8]
Sarachan is also known for placing new copycat businesses next to perceived competitors. In addition to his actions to prevent Amoeba's expansion in Berkeley, Rasputin Music opened a location in 2013 on Haight Street in San Francisco less than a block from an Amoeba Records location.[9] In 2013, following the success of independent ice cream shop CREAM, Inc. at the corner of Channing and Telegraph and contentious Berkeley city hearings, Sarachan opened an ice cream counter called Scoop Dreams directly across the street.[10] Scoop Dreams, which is now closed, was located at the former security counter in the front of Rasputin Music, about ten yards from CREAM.[11]
Acquisition of former Tower Records locations
Rasputin Music acquired the leases of four former Tower Records locations: Concord (where the Pleasant Hill store was relocated), Mountain View, Fresno, and Stockton. The Concord store, despite having been under Rasputin's management since 2007, still carried Tower Records signage with no mention of Rasputin; a poster displayed in the window called the Tower Records signage a "Historical Anomaly." The Concord location closed its doors in 2013 and moved back to its original Pleasant Hill location.[12]
The Mountain View store at San Antonio Road and El Camino Real was closed at the end of 2011. It reopened two weeks later at a new location about a mile southeast on El Camino Real. On May 1, 2016, that Mountain View location closed. The Stockton store located at 6623 Pacific Ave in Lincoln Center South which opened in the former Tower Records building on April 28, 2007 closed on May 6, 2016 was officially evicted on May 10, 2016.[13]
References
- Dennis Taylor (1997-01-03). "Rasputin Music is hoping for sweet sound of success". Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal. Retrieved 2008-10-18.
- Joe Goldeen (2019-03-24). "It's 'The End' for Rasputin Music & Movies in Stockton". Stockton Record. Retrieved 2019-03-26.
- Ed Christman. "Metallica In-Store Set For 'Record Store Day'". Billboard.com. Retrieved 2008-10-18.
- Zagub, Mariam (2018-03-05). "Mad Monk Center for Anachronistic Media suddenly closes after 2 years of operation". The Daily Californian. The Daily Californian.
- Brenneman, Richard (September 21, 2004). "Building Proposed For Vacant Lot At Telegraph, Haste". Berkeley Daily Planet. Retrieved 2015-10-14.
- "Twenty-Five-Year Record Store Feud Spins Again: Rasputin's Rubble on Telegraph and Haste". East Bay Express. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- Fran Dinkenspiel. "Berkeley's Telegraph Avenue, Hit by Hard Times, Needs a Makeover". New York Times. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
- Frances Dinkenspiel. "Berkeley files suit against owner of blighted Telegraph lot". Berkeleyside. Retrieved 2013-06-19.
- "New Rasputin Music Haight Street NOW OPEN!". Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- Staff, Alyssa Neumann |. "CREAM appeals opening of Dream ice cream shop | DailyCal.org". The Daily Californian. Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- "The Scoop on Berkeley's Chilly Ice Cream Rivalry". Retrieved 2015-04-01.
- http://claycord.com/2013/08/05/rasputin-music-moving-back-to-their-old-pleasant-hill-location/
- http://m.recordnet.com/article/20160511/NEWS/160519916/0/rwd/
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Rasputin Music. |