CHAPTER 1
Rhino in High Fidelity
Best Damned Record Store in California
R. Meltzer, Coast Magazine, July 1976
When I arrived back at the store, Jeff and Lee were battling again—not with their fists, not with their voices, but with records as weapons. They alternated their selections on the turntable, trying to drive each other crazy. Lee played cacophonous avant-garde jazz artist Anthony Braxton; Jeff followed with the ragged punk of the Clash’s second album. The taunting climaxed with Lee telling Jeff not to say another word, at which point Jeff responded with “Word, word, word, word!” The two customers seemed blasé about the exchange. At times I reprimanded them, but why listen to me? I was only the manager.
When Richard Foos moved his record concession from Apollo Electronics in Santa Monica into his own space, his intention was not to create the world’s best record store. His primary goal was a modest one: to make more money than he earned from his community social work. He was looking for a business to run, one in which a hippie like himself would feel comfortable. He thought of a revival-run movie house, a small repertory theater, even a local newspaper like The Venice Beachhead, in which he had a column. Because there were a number of chain record stores in the immediate UCLA area, he reasoned that what the students needed was a used record outlet where they could stretch their meager budgets. His inspiration was Aron’s on Melrose Avenue in Hollywood, which was a favorite of savvy buyers for the promotional copies of new releases—usually referred to as “promos”—in their used bins.
Although Richard had secured a small loan from his friend Richard Weinstein, Westwood Village rents were out of the question. He went a few blocks south to 1716 Westwood Boulevard where he split the space and the $200 a month rent with the electronics repairman already occupying the store, Dave Nyan. The building was slightly dilapidated, the neighbors a Chinese laundry and a flower shop.
Before I left for London in September 1973, Richard didn’t know what to name the store. I had suggested Waterloo Sunset Records after my favorite Kinks’ song. While I was away, Richard and a group of his friends were tossing around names when Jerry Kaye—a budding DJ—suggested “Rhino Records.” At the time, it was primarily the alliteration that Richard found appealing. He hung a parachute from the ceiling and emptied his entire collection of records into orange crates placed on large telephone cable spools. He had his friend John Farkash (aka “Fark”) paint a large sign depicting a rhinoceros, identifying the new establishment as Rhino Records.
As a shy individual, when Richard opened the store on October 23, he was looking forward to the excitement of new encounters, and of making deals to buy records. Contrary to his expectations, UCLA kids continued to favor Westwood Village’s chain stores, and as foot traffic was slow, so was business. Richard soon realized that the counterculture consciousness of the late 1960s had passed by the time he opened. Most students who came by, Richard felt, were disgusted by what they saw. They wanted the polish and shine of a large, modern record store, and they wanted the hits. They weren’t interested in the classic jazz and blues albums he stocked. Richard remembered one day when there wasn’t a single customer at all. Still, there were the collectors, and there was some business. Sometimes he was kept on his toes by the small explosions and flying sparks emanating from Nyan’s electronic handy work in the back room.
In the earliest days, Richard employed his roommate, Pete Parks; Steve Cooper (“Coops”), a Cat Stevens lookalike folk singer; and Jeff Gold, a high school senior. Jeff cringes when he remembers Richard salting the bins with thirty dollar collector’s items like John’s Children’s Orgasm, Yardbirds Live, and Longbranch Pennywhistle—all marked at regular price to encourage collectors to make Rhino a necessary stop on their rounds.
Richard liked the wheeler-dealer aspect of the record business, as he knew it. He also delighted in picking up records at U.S. Postal Service auctions of parcels that were undeliverable. At one postal auction he bought two record-pressing machines. Unaware of the vast setup needed to activate the presses, the two machines sat in Fark’s driveway for so long that they sank partially into the ground before he had them hauled off by a junk dealer.
In those early days, Rhino’s stock of hits was minimal because the albums cost too much for such a small markup. Mostly it was used albums, bootlegs (unauthorized, mostly live recordings), and cutouts (perfectly good, sealed albums no longer manufactured or listed in the catalogue and dumped at a low price).
Because he was bored from having so few customers, Richard amused himself by making crudely-lettered signs that he posted in the store. One listed credit cards that the store accepted, like the Rocky & Bullwinkle card. In fact, Rhino didn’t accept any credit cards, only cash and checks. A favorite was “The Ten Most Asked Questions,” which included the following: Q. How come I’m only getting ten cents in trade for this Black Sabbath album, I only played it once? A. Next time don’t use a Bic Pen as your needle. In a reference to the freeway car pool lane: Please Observe Diamond Lane. All persons in lane between 3-5 p.m. Monday thru Saturday must be holding at least 3 records. — Notice — All violations will be ignored. Tape strips fashioned into diamonds similar to ones on on-ramps marked the store’s left aisle.
Richard introduced me to the concept that you could have humor in retail. It wasn’t a tactic to get more customers, nor was it a conscious effort to brand the store and give it a unique identity. By the same token, while it might have appeared to be, it wasn’t an attempt to sabotage the business. Even today, from chain store to boutique, one rarely sees any intended humor expressed.
Richard expanded the exercise of his humor in coming up with contests. One idea was prompted by an effort to get rid of a stack of albums by the Partridge Family’s Danny Bonaduce. Richard couldn’t sell them, so he initiated Rhino’s first promotional effort by paying customers five cents to take the album home, and an additional fifteen cents if they promised to listen to it. Richard got the idea of the first big Rhino customer-participation promotion because he had a quantity of impossible-to-sell Glen Campbell posters that he acquired as part of a lot that included those of the Beach Boys and Vanilla Fudge. “The Glen Campbell Poster Deface Contest” inspired customers to break out all manner of crayons, paints, and Marks-a-Lots to decorate the singer’s image. The winner was the ten-year-old son of the family that owned the Chinese laundry two doors down. Following that was the “Guess How Many Records Are in the Trash Can Contest,” which permitted Richard to rid himself of many unsalable bargain bin LPs with a few desirable records on top to interest the participant. The thought of winning a trash can full of albums (invariably the winning number was around 238) excited many customers, and it proved a perennial favorite.
Rhino developed a bohemian, Beat coffeehouse image—a place where hipsters could hang out, similar to San Francisco’s City Lights bookstore. Informal Friday night jam sessions were held, with Richard playing his bass alongside John Weider, who had been a member of successful English bands like the Animals and Family and who lived in the area.
After my unemployment ran out, I asked Richard for a job. It took a while, but when Coops left in April 1974, I was hired. By that time, Nyan was out of the picture. I opened the store each morning, allowing Richard to look for deals downtown and to pick up product at West Coast one-stop. (A one-stop was a wholesaler that carried product from a majority of the labels.) When I swept the floor, I always paused to note that our stack of Otis Redding and Carla Thomas’s King and Queen album hadn’t diminished, even though it was priced at two dollars.
Is this what my twenty-three-year-old, UCLA-educated life had come down to? Sitting on a ledge behind the counter in a dilapidated record store, munching on a spinach and almond butter sandwich and waiting for a few customers to buy used albums? It was a far cry from working at a prestige store like Tower Records, yet I felt lucky.
With so few customers, there was only so much time I could spend organizing the records in the bins. I read Newsweek and on occasion called Howard Kaylan, who always seemed up for a long chat. The afternoon sun penetrated the large glass window. A shelf behind the counter blocked most of it, but the area still got hot.
When Kareem Abdul-Jabbar first came in, it was a surprise, as we didn’t get celebrities. Head down, he headed straight for the jazz bins. Nobody bothered him. After a while, I looked over and noticed that he had a pile of thirty albums. Sure, they were all two dollars each, but I was anticipating a big sales day for the store. After about an hour, he placed two albums on the counter, totaling four dollars. I couldn’t understand it. With the big salary he got as an NBA star, that’s all he bought? He didn’t come in often, but the routine was repeated; I only saw him purchase one or two albums per visit.
I learned the retail record business, or at least Richard’s version of it. Being a record fan, I thought it would suit me to work at Rhino, but the prospects were too limited for me to think of it in the long term. I was biding my time, still hoping to get a job at a record company. An opening came up for a writer at Cash Box magazine, and Toby Mamis recommended me for the position. Cash Box was a trade magazine, a second-rate Billboard. It wasn’t a record company, but it was working within the industry, and I started the last week in July. Idealistically, I was looking forward to improving the publication’s editorial content. Two weeks later I was fired, on August 8, 1974, the same day President Nixon resigned. I took writing seriously and didn’t realize, as it was explained to me, that the articles were merely to fill in the space between ads, and that being solicitous to the advertisers was paramount. I attributed my dismissal to turning down an interview with Jim Capaldi for a column that was backed up by six weeks. I had interviewed Pink Floyd’s Rick Wright only a few days before and by comparison didn’t think the ex-drummer of Traffic was important enough. The record company complained to the publisher, and I was out.
When I interviewed producer/manager Peter Asher, he told me how insecure the record business was, how you could be fired for no reason, because it happened to him. And then it happened to me. I needed more stability, and Richard gave me my job back. I noticed stacks of old, unpaid bills atop Rhino’s barely-functioning cash register. Richard was laissez-faire about finances. He wasn’t motivated to pay the bills in a timely manner, and late fines were routine. I realized that by paying the bills before the due dates, I could save Richard money on the excess charges alone. When he upgraded the store’s cash register and gave the old one to his friend Jeff Ginsburg, Jeff discovered $200 in cash and $300 in uncashed checks wedged into the back behind the tray.
I became manager and took on more responsibility, focusing on organization and public relations. I had Richard erect a sign—a giant record—that was perpendicular to the street, so people driving by took more notice. I got more of my writer friends to trade in their promotional records. The record companies gave these sample records to writers with the intention that they review them and to DJs and programmers with the hope that they play them on the radio. They didn’t like the idea that so many of these recipients traded in or sold these records to one of the many used record stores, such as Rhino, that were able to resell them. A customer who bought a promo instead of buying a new copy deprived the label of profits and the artist of royalties. To my fellow writers and me—who were paid poorly—this was a way to supplement our incomes. Because the practice was so common, the labels probably should have been more vigilant about disseminating this free product.
My friends David Goldman and Justin Pierce were taking an evening class from David Geffen at UCLA. On the night they invited me to join them, music attorney Lee Phillips was the guest speaker. I saw Geffen before the class started and introduced myself, not mentioning Rhino. Toward the end, one of the students asked, “How can a store like Rhino legally sell promotional records?” Geffen’s short answer was, “They can’t, and we’re going to get them.” I was unnerved, sinking lower in my seat. But nothing happened. In California, the first-sale doctrine stipulated, in short, that there were no restrictions—as it related to records—for an owner to sell an item he owned.
I should also mention that in some cases where money was needed to buy cocaine or other drugs to give to a radio programmer in exchange for playing a record, such a transaction couldn’t be entered into a company expense account. A label promo man would then requisition records, which were later sold to a store for untraceable cash. Unfortunately, Rhino attracted comparatively few promos. Most went to Aron’s. As a result of my experience at the store, years later when we were dispensing promos at our label, I tried to limit the number we made available. Still, it used to infuriate me when I heard that there were quantities at some stores, no doubt sold by people who worked for our distributor.
Richard erected a new sign: WELCOME WHEREHOUSE & RECORD CO. SPIES (please show your security ID for special discount). It wasn’t the result of drug-induced paranoia: Rhino was under surveillance. Not only were record companies sending in spies to look for promos, so did the Wherehouse Records store in Westwood Village. As a result, the Wherehouse Records fifty-store chain initiated a lawsuit against Rhino for selling new releases below cost. The Unfair Practices Act was enacted to protect small stores from the better-funded corporations who could undercut them and drive them out of business. In a twist, Wherehouse Records attempted to use it against Rhino. Owing to Rhino’s return privilege with City One-Stop, Richard was able to bring in a small quantity of new records at a lower price. The case was settled out of court. Because of the press coverage I was able to get, most notably Heather Harris’s piece in the L.A. Free Press, more people became aware of Rhino and sales increased. As a result of the scrutiny, bootlegs were phased out.
I ran a few ads in the UCLA Daily Bruin, and even tried one in the University High School paper, but they didn’t seem to generate much interest. One that ran in an October 1974 issue of the Daily Bruin posed a unique challenge for fans to vote for their preference of two acts by buying the new, live triple album from Emerson, Lake & Palmer, Welcome Back, My Friends … for $6.98, or any of the Steppenwolf albums we had in the bargain bin for 20¢. The ad billed it as Steppenwolf vs. ELP! The Battle of the Century. We had prizes: tickets, posters, and Autographed pictures of your favorite stars (Autographed by us, of course.) Despite the price disparity, ELP won the challenge.
For writers who still thought going to Westwood was inconvenient, I went to their apartments to buy records, a service other stores didn’t offer. I also had Richard carry more new releases. He got rid of the cable spools and had more racks installed. The stock grew to the point where Rhino was known for having the best selection of jazz west of the Rockies, excellent used and cutout selections, a rock collector’s bin, and an in-depth catalogue of new releases. We were an early supporter of reggae and punk. The store’s gross sales doubled in each of the first two years I was manager.
Lee Kaplan’s preference for occasionally wearing a Japanese kimono to work reflected his pretensions as a teen. Although he was a fan of the Electric Light Orchestra and had rock ambitions as a bass guitarist, he was into the most obscure improvised music and became head of the one-man jazz department. His ordering was inspired, but the market for acts he championed, such as the Art Ensemble of Chicago, remained limited. He used his connections to supply the store with albums privately pressed by Sun Ra in Philadelphia, ones for which the keyboardist and/or his band members had created unique collaged artworks or drawings as the covers.
Lee also secured a source in New York where we could buy Jamaican pressings of reggae artists. We were the first ones to have them in Los Angeles, although the orders we received from these ganja-affected distributors were frequently a mishmash. While most of the records in a shipment were the titles we had ordered, some were ones they threw in that they thought we should have, and others seemed like ones they were simply trying to get rid of. Jamaican records were poorly pressed, often pockmarked, and sometimes even included off-center labels that covered over the actual grooves. Not only were there “no returns” for the unwanted or defective pressings, but shipments were only sent via UPS C.O.D.—usually without advance notice—which presented problems if they showed up on a day when we didn’t have enough cash in the till.
The combined musical knowledge of Rhino’s staff (Richard, Lee, Jeff, and me) could probably have trounced that of any record store in the world. Jeff Gold and Lee Kaplan were mainstays of the store, but since Lee was at UCLA and Jeff at USC, their presence was limited to after school, Saturdays, and during the summer. Despite the occasional flare-up of adolescent attitude, it was hard to fire them. They knew their music and often worked when it wasn’t their shift and they weren’t getting paid.
Mark Leviton was living with his girlfriend in Claremont, an expanded college community an hour’s drive east of Los Angeles. His unrealized plans to earn a living writing fiction were further aggravated by a summer of many smoggy, hundred-degree days in an un-air-conditioned house. He approached me about opening a Rhino store in Claremont for them to run. As there was no record store in town, it wasn’t hard to convince Richard.
Rhino Claremont opened in September 1974 in a reconverted house on West Second Street, with the original hitching ring for horses affixed to a tree in front. Mark and his now-wife, Linda, bought a small metal box to use instead of a cash register, which seemed too much for their modest goals and wouldn’t have fit the small store anyway. Richard sprang for a couple hundred t-shirts to give away on opening day. Wanting to be realistic, he advised Mark and Linda not to get their hopes up too high. He recounted his lonely days when the Westwood store first opened and the times he took out his frustration on whoever did manage to wander in.
On the first day, Mark and Linda were overwhelmed by the onslaught. I had to make a run from Westwood with a carload of records to restock the store. When the dust cleared, the small metal box had taken in $1,300, which was a little more than the Westwood store grossed in a whole week. The weekly sales tally settled in at $3,000 during the school year, giving us at the flagship store, an inferiority complex.
While the humor displayed in the new store couldn’t compete with Westwood’s, the musical reverence was similar. In responding to its community’s needs, Rhino Claremont became more of a folk venue than the Westwood store, and resident musicians David Lindley, Chris Darrow, and Jackson Browne were customers. Windham Hill founder Will Ackerman came in and offered Mark an in-store play copy of his first album if he’d buy five of the few hundred he’d pressed. Mark liked the album and was soon selling dozens each week. The feminist label Olivia sold well, as did obscure artists like Honk (Five Summer Stories) and Hawaiian band Kalapana. Other than selling an impressive amount of folk music titles, the store’s customer interests were very similar to Westwood’s.
Each morning I called Mark in Claremont and took his order for product over the phone, which was cheaper than having him call City One-Stop directly. Then I called City and recited both our orders, usually speaking to Howard Kaylan’s brother Alan, whom I knew from high school. Sometimes I picked up the order before I opened the store, sometimes Richard got it if he was in the neighborhood. UPS shipped Claremont’s order. Every morning I deposited the previous day’s receipts and got change at the nearby California Overseas Bank.
To the uninitiated, the incomprehensible assault of hand-lettered signs and disfigured promotional posters could have been as disorienting as being in the maze at a house of mirrors. A more thoughtful first-time visitor might think, “Are these guys serious, or what?” But at both stores relationships developed between Rhino staff and customers who “got it.” The Westwood store was a fun place to hang out, and some consumers reasoned that if they were spending so much time at Rhino anyway, they might as well work there. Championship Vinyl, the store depicted in Nick Hornby’s 1995 novel High Fidelity—and the movie on which it was based—captured much of what Rhino was like, except that our staffers weren’t as condescending.
One customer, Mark Felsot, put it this way: “I felt more comfortable at Rhino than in my own bedroom.” Rhino was a real experience for the record junkie, and many of the customers were as colorful as the surroundings. Al Johnson and his friend Ken traveled forty miles to Rhino every Saturday. The crazy pair sprawled on the floor and barricaded themselves with the hundreds of albums they selected from the bargain bins. After spending hours in the store, they narrowed their mess and bought about 20 percent of the total, with no record costing more than a quarter. Years later, Johnson distinguished himself by penning a number of songs on Ricky Lee Jones’ first album, as well as working as an electrical engineer.
The “Guy Who Asked Too Many Questions” was harmless enough, but his barrage necessitated Richard limiting him to three queries a visit. He was a nice guy though, so when he came in he’d say, “How ya doin’?” Richard would respond, flinging his finger in the air, “That’s one!” Even worse was the gold chain-wearing Italian film student from USC. Every visit he sequentially held up a dozen albums and grunted, “Iz zis good?” Again, he was a nice guy, but totally oblivious of his behavior. Obnoxious customers often discovered themselves posted on Rhino’s “Worst Customer List.” Usually it didn’t deter their presence or demeanor.
Some customers were so offensive that Richard instituted a “Banned from the Store” policy. Steve Sandemeyer, an overweight jazz aficionado with dandruff sprinkling his greasy hair, would habitually sidle up to a much younger girl in the rock section and have no compunction in trying to chat her up. After ignoring a few warnings, Richard, half-yelling and half-laughing at the absurdity, threw him out. Another banned jazz fan tried to talk Richard into merely suspending him, “like they do in basketball.” A black man wearing a dashiki came into the store and amassed a stack of thirty albums. He was on his way out when I stopped him, and told him he had to pay for them. His indignation flared. He slammed the albums on the counter and said, “You want me to pay for these!” Angrily swearing, he reached into his pocket and hurled coins at the back wall. After a handful of volleys, he walked out of the store with no records.
One obnoxious visitor, who hung out in the store for hours on end, never buying anything, became Rhino’s mascot. Wild Man Fischer (real name Larry) was discovered by Frank Zappa in 1968 singing songs on the Sunset Strip for a dime. He boasted an impassioned, emotionally bare, ragged delivery, and a repertoire of childlike songs. His love for rock ’n’ roll and a belief that he would one day make it big added to his absurd charm. Zappa produced a remarkable double-album portrait, An Evening with Wildman Fischer. I first saw him around this time walking through the UCLA campus wearing one flip-flop on his right foot, with the other bare.
Even though his album sold only twelve thousand copies, everybody at Rhino owned one. When Wild Man visited other stores, often he was asked to leave. At Rhino he was acknowledged as a talent. His presence was wearing, including his incessant cycle of self-serving queries: “Am I better than Captain Beefheart? Do you think I’m funnier than Bob Hope? Do I sing better than Frank Sinatra?” In appreciation, he made up a song about our store, which we pressed into a single to give away to our customers.
Tim Doherty was typical of how the ardent Rhino fan related to the store: “My first impression was how the music I was reading about in Cream, Who Put the Bomp and New York Rocker, came to life in the store. They weren’t championing the hit artists of the day, but ones like Sparks, the Quick, and the Dictators. You could rely on the staff’s recommendations that a record was good. Not only was the store a fun place to be, it was a place for information and to meet others who were into the same music. You’d go in on a Monday and Gary Stewart would be talking about who was on Rodney On the Roq [Rodney Bingenheimer’s radio show on KROQ] the previous night.”
Just because somebody rarely made a purchase, didn’t mean that we couldn’t establish a friendly relationship. Bill Leibowitz, an accountant by training, became an executive working for the real estate company that managed the Motown office building in Hollywood. He was a great fan of rock ’n’ roll, a nice guy, and we enjoyed talking to him. He realized a lifelong dream when he opened the Golden Apple Comics store on Melrose Avenue. A yo-yo champ when he was a kid, he did much to spread the culture of yo-yos and comics throughout the city.
There was magnanimity about Richard. He once loaned money to a teenage customer, holding his headphones as collateral. One Christmas Eve Richard leaped on the city bus that stopped by Rhino, dispensed record albums to all the riders, and leaped off at the next stop.
I was envious of Tower Records where celebrities shopped and bought lots of records. We could have used the business. Tower had regular visits from Brian Wilson, David Bowie, and Elton John, who bought so many records they allowed him to shop after hours. We had Russell Morris, and he didn’t even buy anything. Ten years before Crocodile Dundee, when Australian accents were less common in America, Russell Morris came in to sell the promo records he had received from his label, RCA. Sometimes he sent his beautiful, petite wife, whose name was Paula, but who pronounced it “Poola.” With their charming accents, they were always welcome. I felt sorry for him. He had had five big hits in his native Australia, but here he was struggling. Singer Nicolette Larson, who was signed to Warner Brothers, sold some albums she had received from them. She was always friendly, with an engaging smile.
One day in March 1975, Bob Emmer, who was head of West Coast publicity for Atlantic Records, brought the Pretty Things by the store. The English band had a new album out, Silk Torpedo, on Led Zeppelin’s Atlantic-distributed Swan Song imprint. Bob wasn’t bringing them by to encourage sales with a meet-and-greet; it was an act of desperation. Even though Silk Torpedo was a fine album, he had difficulty in setting up interviews with the group. He called the store to see if Steve Rosen and I would do him a favor and interview them, and I said to bring them by. We didn’t have time to come up with much in the way of insightful questions. Singer Phil Maye and bassist Jack Green seemed confused by the cramped, back-room setting—with abandoned tire—where we conducted the interview. Green had previously played in T. Rex and was a Wild Man Fischer fan. Neither of us wrote an article about the visit.
As the business grew there was more of an opportunity to give jobs to our friends. It didn’t always work out. I met Steve Rosen on the rock writers’ circuit, and we became friends. He was a good guitarist and fashioned himself after Deep Purple’s Ritchie Blackmore. I was happy to give him a job at the store, but when we increased his responsibilities to opening up—so I could pick up records downtown—he had difficulty showing up on time, and I had to fire him. I believe it affected our friendship.
One day, a group of kids barreled into the store as though they were being chased by a rival gang in West Side Story. They had long hair, leather jackets, and were generally rough around the edges. They looked intimidating to me. They asked us to stock their new punk fanzine, Back Door Man, on consignment. Richard, without hesitation, said “Sure.” “Phast Phreddie” Patterson and his crew were all from LA’s South Bay. They were passionate about the local scene and were fans of Iggy Pop and Blue Oyster Cult.
Some industry professionals were regular customers, but not many. Pete Rugolo lived in the area. He had been a jazz arranger—mostly for big bands, but also for Miles Davis—and now he was composing and arranging for TV. He used Rhino as his library, looking for arranging ideas. Film editors Kent Beyda and Mark Goldblatt, both working for New World Pictures, bought not only for their own interests but to get ideas for the movies they were editing.
One afternoon, teenage jazz fanatic Don Lucoff brought jazz musician Rahsaan Roland Kirk by the store. Kirk wasn’t happy to be there, and he presciently lambasted the staff for accidentally playing tenor saxophonist Sonny Rollins’ newly-arrived Live in Japan album at the wrong speed on the turntable. The previous record had been a 45 rpm single, and the setting hadn’t been changed back to 33 1/3 rpm to accommodate the long player. As the Rollins’ track was actually a slow ballad, the faster tempo version (seemingly played on an alto!) didn’t seem out of place to anybody but Rahsaan Roland Kirk.
In the 2010 film The Runaways, Kristen Stewart played Joan Jett, but with her natural good looks she was a dead ringer for the fourteen-year-old Kari Krome, the girl who set the project in motion. Kari used to come into the store accompanied by a much older woman who didn’t appear to be her mother; I had heard that she was a lesbian. She was very shy. At the July 3, 1975, Alice Cooper party at the Palladium, she approached producer Kim Fowley with the idea of starting an all-girl band and enlisted Joan Larkin—later Joan Jett—to join. Ultimately Kari became estranged from the project because she couldn’t sing and was too young. Though it was originally conceived as a vehicle for her songs, she was relegated to a handful of co-songwriting credits.
Fowley invited me to see the Runaways’ first public showcase on September 12, 1975, in Phast Phreddie’s parents’ sunken living room in north Torrance. Joan Jett played guitar, Sandy West played drums, and Micki Steele played bass. I liked the concept, but they weren’t very good. It was only a month or two prior to this that I met Joan at the Continental Hyatt House, leaning on a post in the lobby. I went there with Toby Mamis to interview Suzi Quatro. Toby was Suzi’s publicist at the time. Joan took the bus in from West Covina to get a glimpse of her idol. Toby could have ignored her, but he was considerate, to the point of introducing me to this young fan.
Buddy Miles had been a formidable talent as a drummer and soul singer, initially as a member of the Electric Flag, and then with his own band. He had one big-selling album, Them Changes, in 1970. Richard used to sneak into the Whisky a Go-Go to see him play. By the time he released his first album for Casablanca, More Miles Per Gallon in August 1975, his poor career moves had severely tarnished his integrity. For having titled his previous album Booger Bear, he had become something of a joke, even to Richard. It was with that sense of playfulness—not a respect for his current endeavor—that we decorated the store to enter a display contest for the new album. In the photo we submitted, Richard, Jeff, Lee, and I all wore masks of Buddy’s face that we cut out from the marketing poster. We won a motor scooter that was sold and the money split among us. I don’t recall that we moved that many of Buddy’s album—I mean, at a retail price.
In March of the next year Buddy released his subsequent album, Bicentennial Gathering of the Tribes, featuring a cover portrait of him wearing an Indian headdress. Richard and Jeff had their photo taken with Buddy at a promotional meet-and-greet at City One-Stop. The next day Jeff saw him at Tower Records and had him write an autograph to Richard, as “Booger Bear.” In his later years, Buddy’s career was resurrected as the singer on the California Raisins commercials.
The Nuart Theater in West Los Angeles was among the first movie houses to program limited runs of films, mostly changing its program daily. The theater was best known for its weekly midnight showings of The Rocky Horror Picture Show. The screenings cultivated an audience, many of whom dressed up like characters from the movie and interacted with the actors on the screen. Richard came up with the idea to mirror their monthly calendar with one that would highlight different promotional days at the store. I responded to Richard’s lead and contributed where I could. It was our most ambitious promotion, and he was able to get record company advertising money to supplement the calendar we produced which spanned from April 1 to May 15, 1976.
It’s difficult to assess how effective the special days were for drumming up business. Some, like Reggae Day—which included an in-store performance—didn’t attract any more customers. Nor did Mother’s Day, in which our mothers manned the checkout counter. Still, enough days were successful that we did the promotion again in the fall of the following year.
A sampling of days:
Those who excel academically often get rewards. Richard, an academic underachiever himself, wanted to balance that with “C” Student Day: In honor of all the underachievers in this world, anyone bringing in a report card showing his grade average was “C” or below will receive a free album. Report cards can be from any year, and skillful forgeries will qualify.
The typical record store was staffed by low-key, hippie-garbed clerks. For Salesman Day, Richard, Lee, and I slicked ourselves up with matching seersucker jackets that Richard had picked up at a thrift store and wore “Wherehouse Records” name tags. In the manner of aggressive hi-fi salesmen, we were overly solicitous in approaching our customers. As part of the day, we had the Hassle the Salesman Contest: Ever wanna get back at us for only giving you 5 cents in trade on the first Mama’s and Papa’s LP? Have you been fuming ever since we ran out of Steve Martin’s album? This is your day, go ahead and hassle us. Best hassler wins a prize. (Sadists, don’t be left out.)
It’s one thing to rebel against the constraints of a job or an employer, but what are you rebelling against when you are the business owner? Richard and I were both fans of Monty Python’s Flying Circus. At the store we stocked cutouts of their first two albums and promoted them to our customers. After the series started airing on the local PBS station we sold impressive numbers of those as well as the new Matching Tie and Handkerchief album. The Pythons were a new influence on our humor. We transposed their bit about the furniture salesman who puts a bag over his head and yells when a customer mentions “mattress.” We tried it twice with Richard shouting “Whoop Whoop!” to a trigger word, but the customers didn’t seem to notice the aberrant behavior.
Sometimes Richard’s actions bordered the obnoxious. He hung a noose around the neck of a cardboard standup of John Denver to express how he felt about his music. After closing hour, Richard often answered the phone and impersonated a long, absurd, automatic phone message—including the beep—and waited to see if the customer had lasted the duration. When the Rhino softball team played the opening day of the 1976 Hollywood Showbiz League against the team from Happy Days (which included Ron Howard and Henry Winkler), there were no planned opening day ceremonies, like in professional baseball. We Rhinos arranged ourselves along the third bass line and played the National Anthem on kazoos. For the opening pitch Richard substituted the softball with a grapefruit that was painted white. The first batter for Happy Days swung at the fat pitch and splattered the grapefruit, to our amusement.
Obviously the goal was for Rhino to be considered as much more than a typical record store. More than anything else, an atmosphere prevailed that music was to be taken seriously, even if it was presented in a fun manner. The Ramones first came to the store in August 1976 and made a point of visiting when they were in town. Rather than punk or hard rock, as suggested by their image, I was surprised that their purchases were usually of ’60s artists like Herman’s Hermits and the Lovin’ Spoonful.
In London in September 1976, I went to a cutout dealer and bought a few hundred albums, as well as buying the first Stiff Records to be sold in a US store. When I returned, Richard made a big deal of surprising me with a listening booth he had installed. Listening booths were a feature of many record stores in the ’50s and ’60s, but had largely died out by the ’70s. They provided a small area where one or two people could listen to a demonstration record before deciding to buy a new copy. Ours was a little larger than a phone booth, but with tall Plexiglas walls, it looked more like a dunk tank. It was a novel idea, but the turntable kept breaking, so I don’t know if it actually paid for itself.
In January 1977 we hired Gary Stewart. Compared to Jeff and Lee, Gary was a novice, but he was eager to learn and had a great attitude. As a high school student he was disenchanted with the music played on Top 40 radio. That void was filled when he was exposed to great artists of the ’60s—“like the Animals, Herman’s Hermits, and Otis Redding”—from listening to oldies radio and reading Phonograph Record Magazine and Bomp. As a young consumer he asked good questions, bought the records we recommended, and was always welcomed. “There was an aloofness that pervaded the store that I really liked,” he observed. “The people there had a sense of being in the know, and the more time I spent in the store, I felt I had that as well, even though I didn’t understand what I was in the know about.” Gary was also attending Cal State Northridge and working part-time at McDonald’s.
The stock often reflected Richard’s penchant for taking a stance. He refused to carry Barbra Streisand’s A Star is Born soundtrack album because Columbia Records had raised the list price by $2, from $6.98 to $8.98. Even though his profit would have been more, he tried to discourage customers from endorsing the price hike, reasoning that if these pricing experiments succeeded, all new records would be unnecessarily more expensive. Of course, explanatory posters accompanied these positions.
In August 1977 we temporarily relocated the store to 10461 Santa Monica Boulevard next to a McDonald’s, while a new building was being constructed on the site of the old one. The new location was a building owned by and split with Carmine’s Restaurant. Our space had formerly been a clothing store, and we made use of the changing rooms—sans partitions—for our listening booth and a new magazine rack. At three each afternoon, the aroma of sautéed garlic and onions permeated our back room as the cooks next door prepared the evening meals. Sometimes we saw actor James Caan pull up to the front in his sports car. Curiously, on a number of Monday evenings when the restaurant was closed, black Cadillacs and town cars bearing New Jersey and New York plates filled the parking lot.
After school started in September the kids from Concord High School a block away spent their breaks in the store. It was a small, progressive, liberal arts school that catered to mostly sensitive, bored rich kids. Among the handful of regulars was David Crouch, a nice guy who seemed more interested in what we were doing than the others. A few months after he graduated, Richard and I hired him to work at the Rhino label.
McDonald’s management was upset because our customers occasionally parked in their lot. Rather than attempting to work things out agreeably, the by-the-book management became antagonistic. Richard responded by lampooning their Ronald McDonald clown character, having Jeff Ginsburg assume a considerably more perverse looking clown with a curly red wig, rhino horn, and placard identifying him as Rhino McDino. Taking a break during a Rhino promotion, McDino entered McDonald’s to quench his thirst, but was refused service. Richard responded to McDonald’s further uptight seriousness by painting a mural of our new McDino mascot on the side of the building that faced McDonald’s lot. It parodied the hamburger chain’s numerical claims of hamburgers purchased by stating how many records we had moved: “Over 300,000 sold.”
Maybe it was being next to McDonald’s, but we had more visits from celebrities—although I don’t recall anybody coming in more than once. One afternoon when I returned to the store during a slow afternoon, someone who looked like Bryan Ferry was perusing the bins. Jeff Gold and the other employees were sitting behind the counter, nonchalant. As Jeff was a big Roxy Music fan, I reasoned that it couldn’t be him. After he purchased his records and left, I remarked that the customer looked like Bryan Ferry. When Jeff said it was, I couldn’t believe he didn’t talk to him. Bryan was apparently so shy that he had a short guy with him who whipped up to the counter and asked questions like where Jack Nitzche’s Lonely Surfer album was, and then rushed back to tell Bryan. They whispered to each other. After snaring that one, Bryan sent his man over to the counter to ask where the first Neil Young album was, etc. “I guess he didn’t feel like talking,” Jeff said. Alice Cooper and Burton Cummings came in, separately, looking for out-of-print Jimi Hendrix and Traffic albums. Steely Dan’s Donald Fagen asked for albums by jazz pianist Lennie Tristano.
One ex-rock star who came in more than once—and I wished he hadn’t—was Sky Saxon, the ex-lead singer of the Seeds. I had been a fan of his LA band, which was best known for its 1967 Top 40 hit “Pushin’ Too Hard.” I ran into him at the Troubadour in 1971. Saxon looked and sounded like comedian Jerry Lewis: he had a handsome, fuller face with a cleft chin and a distinct, nasal singing voice. When I met him he still had his rock-star good looks. I tried to set up a concert for him and his group at UCLA, but he wasn’t together enough to make it happen. When he came into the store seven years later, he was a different person. With his long, stringy hair, he looked twenty years older than he was, reminding me of the Old Witch from Tales of the Crypt. In slow, burned-out hippie patter, he explained that he was now called “Sunlight” (his real name was Richard Marsh) and had been living in a commune in Hawaii. He collected packs of dogs because D-O-G spelled backwards was G-O-D. He was flogging his new record, “Beautiful Stars,” a twelve-inch single pressed on red vinyl. I bought some just to get rid of him.
At a subsequent visit, he introduced us to his manager, “Flashlight” (real name: Jeff Gruber), an obviously sleazy, Igor-type of character. A few years later Gruber hoodwinked Richard into compiling a box of Rhino promos to be picked up for the Troggs’ lead singer, Reg Presley, who he said was in town. Weeks later he tried to pull the scam again, but I answered the phone this time. I could tell the “Reg Presley” who was calling had a fake English accent—I had spent time with Presley years earlier and knew what he sounded like. I shined Gruber—I mean, Flashlight—on.
The most beautiful girl I had ever seen—close up—walked into the store with her boyfriend. The fantasy I was developing quickly evaporated when she asked for a 1972 album by the Addrisi Brothers, We’ve Got to Get It On Again, revealing her lack of taste. Anna Bjornsdottir was from Iceland. She left her phone number, but I wasn’t able to find the album for her. Later, when I saw that she had a small part in More American Graffiti, I reasoned that’s why she was in town.
I came up with the idea that we should picket the store in order to get media coverage. Businesses are usually picketed by disgruntled employees or their union in a dispute over labor policies or compensation. In this case, we employees picketed in front of the store, proclaiming that our customers were unfair to us because we didn’t have enough of them. The media didn’t bite. Years later we tried the same stunt when we picketed record stores (with their permission) to Save the LP, in an effort to gain attention for the rapidly declining vinyl format. The media didn’t bite that time, either.
From the time I first met him, Richard always had a beard. For Halloween he, Fark, and Joe Morris (actually Joe Blustein) shaved half of their respective beards before making the party circuit. No one believed the half beards were real. When Richard was back at the store, now fully shaved, no one recognized him. He never grew another beard, nor did his friends.
In November 1977 we kicked off another Calendar of Events, which ran through December. Most of the theme days were different. Unemployed People’s Day reflected the economy of the time: Down and out, need a job, don’t know where your next record is coming from? Cast the blues aside, Rhino is here to help out. No, we can’t give you a job. But we will be giving you a free record. Just bring in your unemployment card and we will give you a free record by an unemployed rock group. During Thanksgiving week we sold our “turkey” albums for forty cents a pound.
Previously we had in-store appearances from radio DJ Rodney Bingenheimer and producer Kim Fowley. Fowley’s night was particularly entertaining. He took charge by sticking the microphone in front of the amplifier, generating painful feedback to get the crowd’s attention, and calling Rhino’s customers “assholes.” We brought him back for an encore. With more space, we were able to accommodate more fans, so we had more guests: singer Peter Noone (Herman’s Hermits), producer Mike Chapman, and Wild Man Fischer. Writer Richard Meltzer, who penned this chapter’s epigraph, climaxed the performance with his band Vom by pouring cockroaches onto his head, which he failed to retrieve prior to leaving.
On Saturday, December 10, UK pub band Eddie and the Hot Rods pulled up to the front of the store on a flatbed truck for a prearranged live performance. Their UK hit from that past summer, “Do Anything You Wanna Do,” was among my favorite records of the year. Island Records A&R man and ex-rock star Spencer Davis joined them on guitar for a cover of Bob Seger’s “Get Out of Denver.” They were in town playing the Whisky. Unfortunately, not many people turned up to see them play at Rhino.
The Beverly Hills outpost of the German label Ariola Records wanted to get into the punk game and formed an imprint called Zombie Records. The first release was a record I produced, “Punk Rock Christmas” by the Ravers. Richard got a Christmas tree to display in the window, which we decorated with the single’s picture sleeves, each attached by a safety pin. Pat Smear (real name: Georg Ruthenberg), the guitarist of the Germs, came in and commenced to spit on the tree display, apparently resenting what he saw as the commercial exploitation of the punk scene, or expressing his frustration that the Germs couldn’t get signed. Being totally insensitive to the pain he must have been suffering, I threw him out. Months later at the new store, Lee threw him out again—this time with fellow Germ Darby Crash—for spitting on our window.
Jeff Gold had introduced me to Bruce Gary, a record collector who always seemed to be hustling for gigs as a drummer. Based on the local airplay that “Punk Rock Christmas” was receiving, Bruce came into the back room and offered his services as a drummer together with ex-Cream bassist Jack Bruce, “for scale,” for an upcoming recording project. It was tempting, but I had nothing planned.
Richard and I released our first album on the Rhino Records label, Wildmania by Wild Man Fischer, in January 1978. We had previously released a number of singles, but an LP marked a bigger commitment. Initial sales were good enough to encourage us to plan more albums. Throughout the year, while I was still in charge of managing the store, more of my time went into working on our label releases. Putting the records together, and in some cases making new recordings in the studio, was more creatively stimulating for Richard and me than running a record store.
We grew comfortable with having more room than in our previous building. Our problems with McDonald’s notwithstanding, we considered not moving back, but Carmine wanted the option of expanding his restaurant into the space and only wanted to make Rhino’s occupation temporary. McDonald’s threatened legal action over the Rhino McDino mural on the building, so Richard painted it over, but only after we had moved back to Westwood Boulevard into the new building in April 1978.
Lee arranged to import pressings from Japan, which music fans coveted—even at high prices—because they sounded better than their American counterparts and had elaborate packaging. Usually the enclosed lyric sheets contained numerous amusing errors. Some albums hadn’t been issued in the United States, such as recent Sony releases by Miles Davis—live titles, Pangea and Agharta—and live albums by Cheap Trick and Santana, and the Runaways on Mercury. We sold sixty copies of Cheap Trick at Budokan. Its success encouraged the group’s US label, Epic, to manufacture the album in the States. It spawned the group’s first hit single “I Want You to Want Me” and sold better than any other album released throughout their career.
Even as a teen, Jeff Gold amassed a formidable Jimi Hendrix vinyl collection. He brought to the store the expertise of the collectors market and, with Lee, had the knowledge to identify what European import albums we should carry. We stocked imports from the UK Virgin label, as well as European progressive groups like Neu!, Gong, and Tangerine Dream. When closing on Saturday nights, Jeff played a 45 of Booker T. and the MG’s “Green Onions” at a 33 1/3 speed to clear the store of lingering customers.
You had to be smart to do your job at Rhino. In assessing used or promotional albums that were traded in, you had to be as sharp as a bond salesman or insurance actuary. You wanted to pay top dollar—more than the stores in Hollywood—to entice customers to make the trip to Westwood. But if you guessed wrong too many times—if you overpaid—the store failed to make a profit. You had to be aware of all the new releases, as well as all the albums of the sixties and seventies—and then some—and in an age before the personal computer, all in your head. And you had to know when tastes changed. In 1976 Frampton Comes Alive! was the top selling record of the year. Less than three years later, it was the top traded-in record of the year. Nobody wanted it, even at bargain bin prices. There were twenty-five used copies sitting on a shelf in the back room.
We enjoyed recommending obscure records to our clientele. Whether an album was worthwhile was not necessarily reflected by its sales, and good records fell through the cracks. Among our favorites: Tommy Hoehn’s Losing You To Sleep, Godfrey Daniel’s Take a Sad Song …, David Werner’s Whiz Kid, Big Star’s first two records, and albums by Elliott Murphy, Zuider Zee, Van Dyke Parks, Michael Roether, and The Moon (featuring ex-Beach Boy David Marks). The jazz department, which was responsible for 40 percent of Rhino’s total stock, boasted old releases on Pacific Jazz, 1500-series Blue Note, and Ken Nordine’s Word Jazz.
We stocked a lot of independently pressed records that we recommended to our customers, the best example being Devo’s first two singles. We promoted them and sold close to four hundred, much more than any other store. We sold so many of professional wrestler Freddie Blassie’s King of Men EP that we made a deal to issue it on our new Rhino label. Rory Johnston was Sex Pistols’ manager Malcolm McLaren’s West Coast representative. He brought the Clash’s Mick Jones into the new store, but only after I promised to give Jones free records.
Nels Cline, a guitarist friend of Lee’s, joined him in the jazz department. He heard Will Ackerman playing his new record on the radio. Cline liked it and contacted Will, but had to convince him to sell the store a box of twenty-five. Will expressed his doubts because he didn’t think Rhino could sell that many. He sent the box anyway. Rhino became the first store in LA to stock the record, and that initial box sold out in less than a week.
Cline developed a friendship with jazz customer George Winston, who was then employed as a deliveryman for Larry Flint Publications’ Hustler and Chic. He had been a stride piano practitioner, but was no longer active. Nels encouraged George to resume playing and later introduced him to Ackerman. One day George wanted to get Nels’ opinion on a tape “a friend” of his had recently recorded. Nels replied that it was “the most boring music he had ever heard.” George revealed that it was, in fact, he himself performing what was to be his debut Windham Hill album, Autumn, which became the tiny label’s breakout success. George went on to become the best-selling instrumentalist of his day. Despite his success, George shuns the spotlight: “It’s like I’m in the Rhino listening booth, and I’m having this terrible dream …”
In part because of the success of Rhino Claremont, I had suggested we open more stores. If we had a couple more, we would have sufficient enough business to be able to buy directly from the major labels, paying less per record than buying from a middle-man, or one-stop, as we had been doing. Richard thought two more stores would mean more investment and more potential headaches; plus he would have to find an honest and capable manager for each.
Year in, year out, the store kept getting better. It achieved a level far beyond anything Richard Foos imagined when he opened the original store. Richard Meltzer’s article in Coast magazine was titled “Best Damned Record Store in California.” Ray Coleman’s column from America in the English music weekly Melody Maker said, “This place is amazing!” The accolades were nice, and the business generated enough for a hippie like Richard to live on, but Richard was no longer interested in retail.
In 1978 he hired a business broker to sell the store. The buyer, Steve Ferber, had sold a magazine stand and was looking for a subsequent business. He was a pipe-smoking hippie and reggae fan. He asked me to stay on to manage the store, and was willing to give me a slight increase over what Richard had paid me, but I declined. Richard and I were moving on at the end of the year, as cofounders of the Rhino Records label.