Best Record Store
For the record, the Valley has plenty of shops where collectors and audiophiles can flip through bin after bin of new and used vinyl. But none offer the pure crate-digging joys of The Ghost of Eastside Records. The iconic Tempe store’s selection is as enormous and diverse as it is messy. Longtime owner Michael Pawlicki, a fixture since the shop opened as just Eastside Records in 1987, keeps things gloriously haphazard. Heaps of records spill across counters. The punk section sits on the opposite end from the rock platters. Milk crates of old 45s and used vinyl occasionally block the aisles. Searching for titles isn’t so much browsing as it is excavating. It’s all a part of the store’s charms and worth enduring to uncover the gems found within. You never know what you’ll find during a visit to Eastside, and no two hauls are ever alike. Hunting for a newer Ursa Minor release or a Sun Ra reissue? You might leave with an armful of Duane Eddy or Thelonious Monk albums. (Elsewhere, various shelves contain such treasures as local indie releases and used CDs, tapes and VHS tapes.) Eastside may never win any awards for organization, but it’s tops in our book as a vinyl destination.