Boogie Records occupied a triangular peninsula that pointed like an arrowhead into the intersection of Stadium Drive and West Michigan Avenue, two wide and busy roads at the bottom of the hilly neighborhood where I grew up near Kalamazoo College. Like the parcel of land it sat on, the store resembled an isosceles triangle or, perhaps more fitting, the planchette for a Ouija board. The entrance was at the narrow point. Beyond it lay the stuff of rock ’n roll dreams.
To me, Boogie was a landbound Bermuda Triangle. Shrouded in mystery, vaguely dangerous, it held a cache of untold treasures, none of which I was allowed to explore because I was a kid, and my parents regarded the place with deep suspicion.
Boogie was universally acknowledged in Kalamazoo in the 1970s and 1980s as a counterculture mecca. Its mascot was Robert Crumb’s Keep on Truckin’ dude, its slogan “boogie on in…boogie on out.” Its bubble-letter Boogie logo was embellished with bulging-eye pupils in the Os. Cartoon dancing hippies flanked the sticker-covered glass door—another nod to R. Crumb and Cheap Thrills if you were old enough to remember Big Brother and the Holding Company, which I wasn’t. I figured the graphics were inspired by Wacky Packs trading cards.
Simply put, the store itself looked stoned. You could almost imagine it exhaling a cloud of fragrant weed through its front door. The pothead vibe clashed violently with the architecture of the building that housed it—a whimsical English Tudor with a steeply pitched roof over brown-and-white half-timbering and red brick. Built in the 1920s, it had served as a pharmacy and a soda shop before Boogie Records shambled in and took up residence like a tie-dyed squatter.
I loved the incongruity. It reinforced the shop’s mystical allure. Lewis Carroll’s Alice in Wonderland meets Jefferson Airplane’s “Go Ask Alice.” Part charm. Part trip. Total fancy. Boogie seemed to embody every aspect of teen culture that lay beyond my experience, hovering just out of reach. Not only could you buy albums there, you could buy concert tickets. I’d never been to a concert, though I listened to WLAV and WGRD religiously. It was also rumored that you could buy drug paraphernalia there. (True. You could.) Hearing this cemented the store as Wonderland in my mind. I half expected to find a six-foot caterpillar smoking a hookah on a giant mushroom when at last I turned 14, scraped together enough money from my crappy summer fast food job to buy some vinyl, and worked up the courage to cross the Rubicon and boogie on in.
Too many rites of passage loom large in the imagination and let you down in life. But Boogie Records was every bit the Aladdin’s Cave I had envisioned. It felt alive and pulsing with the spirits of countless musicians whose songs blasted from speakers in the corners. It smelled of incense and old cardboard, like a used bookshop. Broad swaths of the polished hardwood flooring were worn pale and rough by browsing music fans. Hanging plants hovered like spiders on draglines above a long glass counter that held all manner of smoking devices, from bongs to one-hitters. Not that I knew what any of that gear was for. I’d never even heard the term head shop. Infinitely more important, there were wooden bins upon bins upon bins of albums. White plastic dividers bore label-maker strips with artists’ names, some festooned with colorful Sharpie drawings of band logos and mascots.
I don’t remember the first album I bought, but I was a Led head and Boogie helped me build my library of Zeppelin, a band whose arcane album titles (or lack thereof) felt like the perfect purchase, a secret language I could finally speak. In high school, I bought My Aim Is True, The Game, Escape, Exodus, War, Back in Black, The River, Making Movies, One More From the Road, and many more albums that I played so many times they crackled and popped like Rice Krispies in milk.
I bought concert tickets there, too—for bands from April Wine at local Wings Stadium to a triple bill of Iggy Pop, Santana, and The Rolling Stones at the Pontiac Silverdome.
Some people said it was the beginning of the end when Boogie started carrying cassette tapes. Others prophesied its doom when the business expanded to a chain of stores. They were right. By the late 1990s, Boogie Records was long gone from Kalamazoo, and so was I.
Today my albums belong to my daughter. At 23, she loves vinyl as much as I did, though she can’t understand why I cringe when she puts my beloved rock classics on her plaid retro suitcase of a record player. It’s comforting to know that a few mementos of Boogie Records rock on, even without the Technics turntable and Bose speakers I coveted back in the 1980s. Watching her makes me think Neil Young might be right after all. Maybe rock ’n roll will never die. She pulls her latest favorite out of its sleeve and places the needle at the beginning of side one, old school. I swear, I can almost smell the incense.
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