Home » News » Kissa: The Ultimate Guide to Japanese Kissaten Culture

Kissa: The Ultimate Guide to Japanese Kissaten Culture

“`html





Reverie Record Shop: A Sake‌ & Vinyl Haven in <a href="https://www.newsdirectory3.com/umpqua-softball-coach-player-die-in-fatal-crash/" title="Umpqua Softball Coach, Player Die in Fatal Crash">Roseburg</a>,​ Oregon


Reverie Record Shop: ‍A Sake &⁢ Vinyl Haven in Roseburg,⁣ Oregon

“Ride this train to Roseburg, Oregon,” says Johnny Cash in his gravelly intro ⁤to “Lumberjack,” the third track of his 1960 concept ⁤album, Ride This Train.⁣ Over the blare of a rail‌ whistle, Cash continues: “Now there’s a town for you – and you talk about rough.”

Rough ​this southern Oregon town still can be, and unashamedly redneck with flotillas of pick-up trucks routinely lifted ⁤high enough for drivers to slam dunk a basketball merely by⁢ reaching ‌out the window. Gun sellers outnumber ‍bookstores at least 10 to 1 (and that’s a used bookstore).

[Embedded YouTube Video – Description of content would go here]

So ​imagine my surprise finding ‌a sake and record bar. Japanese rice wine and new vinyl albums here?

Yes! Long and slim, lined with ​framed music photography and album racks jam-packed with collectors’ wet dreams, Reverie Record Shop is a corridor drawing the ​wanderer away from SE Jackson St. and, at the rear, sake (the fridge stocks a dozen varieties), coffee, craft beer on tap, easy‌ chairs and‍ an ever-spinning, lamp-lit, VPI Aries turntable.

Newcomers may wonder if this is a ⁢serious business ⁤or money-laundering ​exercise. It’s‍ legit and in the black, declare owners Michelle and ‍Albert, refugees from LA.

Albert and michelle at Reverie Record Shop

You may also like

Leave a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.