I have periodically called up my parents to thank them for raising me in San Francisco.
Sure, they met and married here, but there was always a chance they could have returned to the midwest or northeast with me. But I’m so glad they stayed!
It was wonderful to grow up in a place where school building dominate the neighborhoods; where there are so many libraries; where I had so many classmates from other places, domestically and internationally; where I could hear different languages while riding the bus or visiting a friend at home; where there are so many cool, kid-friendly parks and museums; where I could go trick or treating with grown men dressed as fairies; where my multi-racial background and my parents’ interracial marriage were within local norms; where I could see adults with a very wide range of professions, and know how many options there are….
It has also been great to be an adult here. There is an economy! While there are boom-bust cycles, there are often plenty of jobs, and many are in new industries. The idea of changing the world with an invention seemed totally possible – nearly inevitable! I didn’t know in childhood that I (and many of my friends and classmates) had futures working in industries that were just being created.
The boom-bust cycles are rough, and both the wild successes (like tech) and the disasters (like COVID) can be disruptive and devastating. For the past few years, the City has felt a bit hollowed out, though I see positive signs of revival when I am out and about.
San Francisco is a great place, and I feel lucky to live here.
I’m organizing some of my things for a construction project, and one of those things is my Long Playing Record (LP) collection. My first actual music “album” was an audiocassette of Rick Springfield’s Working Class Dog, and the original Sony Walkman made cassettes preferable, so I could take music with me on long transit rides (and somehow, all transit rides were long back then!).
However, records were… special. You would plop down in front of your home stereo and listen to records to listen to records, not just as background music for other things! It was a wonderful activity, and I had some enormous headphones (which surely belonged to my father) with a spiral cord that would attach me to the stereo for HOURS. But it was also good to have friends over to listen to records together.
I don’t buy records anymore, in this era of buying online and having music on many devices — who would have thought I would listen on tiny Bose earbuds to my music ON MY PHONE (!?!?!?) — but I still enjoy my collection.
I’m sharing a list of my 12″ records sorted by year recorded. This will tell you about my age (eek), and also when my core record-buying years were. Even during those years, my audio cassette purchases were high at the beginning, and my CD purchases overlapped at the end, so this isn’t a complete reflection of my music buying at the time. It does reflect music I took the time to enjoy at home, or took a risk on, since records were reasonably priced (and were what I spent my allowance and job income on). This list includes LPs (long playing records), EPs (extended playing records – collections of 2 or more songs), 12″ singles (songs too long to fit on a 45 single song record, usually because they have been remixed), and various special variations of these (versions released in other countries, picture disks, etc.).
My 12″ Records Sorted by Year of Release, then Artist Name ( 122 Items)
1972
Bowie, David – The Rise and Fall of Ziggy Stardust and the Spiders from Mars — RCA — 1972
1977
Bowie, David – Heroes — RCA — 1977
Elvis Costello – My Aim Is True — Stiff — 1977
1978
Elvis Costello and the Attractions – Armed Forces — Columbia — 1978
1979
B-52’s, The – The B-52’s — Warner Bros — 1979
1981
Duran Duran – Careless Memories 12″ — Tritec — 1981
Duran Duran – Nite Romantics (Japan Edition) — EMI — 1981
Idol, Billy – Don’t Stop — Chrysalis — 1981
1982
Adam Ant – Friend or Foe — Epic — 1982
Clash, The – Combat Rock — CBS — 1982
Culture Club – Kissing to be Clever — Virgin — 1982
Duran Duran – Carnival (Japan Edition) — Tritec — 1982
Duran Duran – Rio 12″ — EMI — 1982
Foreigner – Records — Atlantic — 1982
Madness – The Rise and Fall – — Stiff — 1982
Men At Work – Cargo — Columbia — 1982
Depeche Mode – See You (Extended Version) — Mute — 1982
1983
Culture Club – Colour By Numbers — Virgin — 1983
Def Leppard – Pyromania — Polygram — 1983
Depeche Mode – Construction Time Again — Sire — 1983
Duran Duran – Is There Something I Should Know? 12″ — Tritec — 1983
Duran Duran – New Moon on Monday 12″ — EMI — 1983
Duran Duran – Seven and the Ragged Tiger — EMI — 1983
Duran Duran – Union of the Snake 12″ — Tritec — 1983
Echo and The Bunnymen – EP Recorded Live a tthe Royal Albert Hall — Sire — 1983
Fixx, The – Reach the Beach — MCA — 1983
Frankie Goes to Hollywood – Relax 12″ — ZTT — 1983
Palmer, Robert – Heavy Nova — EMI / Manhattan — 1988
REM – Green — Warner Bros — 1988
Smithereens, The – Green Thoughts — Enigma/Capitol — 1988
Talking Heads – Naked — Sire — 1988
1989
Figures on a Beach – You Ain’t Seen Nothing Yet 12″ — Sire — 1989
Nine Inch Nails – Pretty Hate Machine — TVT — 1989
Replacements, The – Don’t Tell a Soul — Sire — 1989
(I do have more records than this, but these are the ones I’m taking responsibility for.)
I’ll (eventually) post a separate list of my audio CDs eventually, and perhaps create a “featurette” page with an inventory of my physical music collection as a whole, organized by artist, especially if I can find one of my old ’80s inventories to fill in the cassette gaps.