This is an eyewitness report from the NowPublic member Kati Garner who was on the scene.
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Photos|Kati Garner
The neon sign on what was the very first Tower Records store was removed early this morning. The sign is being donated to the Sacramento Archives & Museum Collection Center (SAMCC), a Sacramento City and County agency, for preservation by the property owner, Kenneth Schlesinger.
Also donated to SAMCC is the Tower Books sign on the adjacent building, owned by local realtor Alan Cordano.
Tower Records founder Russ Solomon and Rick Hernandez, Tower's first employee watched as the signs came down.
Russ Solomon began his record store empire in the 1950’s, selling records out of his father’s pharmacy on Broadway in Sacramento.
The landmark Tower Building is the namesake of the business, but Solomon opened his first store on Watt Avenue at El Camino in 1960. The chain commenced with the Broadway location in 1966 and a store in San
Francisco in 1967, and the expansion is history.
An unfortunate sign of the times, eighty-nine U.S. Tower Record stores were liquidated in 2006,
although many stores still operate globally.
Tower Records changed the way music was sold in the United States and abroad, and the legacy will
live on through the generous donation of a physical piece of Tower Records’ history.
The neon signs came down with the help and
donation of services by Pacific Neon and SR Moving & Storage. The signs will be moved to the storage facility of the Sacramento Archives & Museum Collection Center at McClellan Park, where they will be preserved
for all Sacramentans.
Solomon now operates the former Tower Records store on Broadway as R5 Records.
Kati Garner
Sacramento, California, United States
harringtola
Town-send, Massachusetts, United States
Fred Miller
Friendswood, Texas, United States
Amy Judd
Vancouver, Canada
Jordan Yerman
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Rachel Nixon
Vancouver, Canada
mtippett
Vancouver, Canada
Paschen
Narita, Chiba, Japan
Karen Hatter
All Locations, Everywhere, United States
mudricky
Glasgow, Scotland, United Kingdom
Jarrett Martineau
Vancouver, Canada
Most RecentMost Recommended Comments (5)
at 11:16 on March 12th, 2009
Great post and photos - a piece of history there!
at 11:16 on March 12th, 2009
Looking at that first image just hurts.
at 11:20 on March 12th, 2009
This is sad - it must be terrible to watch this if it is your store
at 12:25 on March 12th, 2009
End of a Era. Thank you for the report.
at 12:53 on March 12th, 2009
Thanks for this. A sad day indeed.