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Amoeba Music won’t be reopening its original Sunset Boulevard store

Michael Juliano
Written by
Michael Juliano
Editor, Los Angeles & Western USA
Amoeba Music
Photograph: Shutterstock
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UPDATE (4/27): In a statement posted to its Instagram account on Monday, Amoeba announced that it would not be reopening its nearly two-decade-old flagship on Sunset Boulevard. Instead, the indie record shop will divert all of its resources to opening its new shop on Hollywood Boulevard, which they still hope to have ready in the fall. “There are so many unknowns and uncertainties for a business like ours right now,” the statement reads. “The only way we can keep Amoeba Hollywood alive in the future is to make this difficult decision now.”

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It is with a very heavy heart that we announce that the massive impact from COVID-19 has forced Amoeba Hollywood to remain closed until we can hopefully move to our new location this fall. We are devastated. We know you are too. We never envisioned not being able to give the store the send-off it deserves, to give you all a chance to say goodbye. But we are facing too many mitigating circumstances. This is not the end of Amoeba! We are moving to a new location at 6200 Hollywood Blvd in the fall and we feel fortunate that this plan was set into motion long before COVID-19. There are so many unknowns and uncertainties for a business like ours right now. The only thing we do know for certain is that we intend to survive. We want to continue to be there for our amazing customers and our incredible staff in our new location long after this pandemic disappears. The only way we can keep Amoeba Hollywood alive in the future is to make this difficult decision now. Thank you ALL so much for your support during this time and over the years. We have the best customers in the world, as evidenced by the tremendous outpouring of support for our GoFundMe. Your generosity is going to help cover health care for our employees at all three stores, and generally help Amoeba continue while we all must remain closed. We miss you all and cannot wait until we can be together again. Please read our full statement online at https://amoeba.com/moveupdate

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Our original story about the store’s GoFundMe campaign appears below.

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It’s become a pit stop on music-lover’s tours of Hollywood, it’s hosted concerts from Patti Smith and Paul McCartney, and it’s weathered the Great Recession and the transition from CDs to MP3s to all things streaming. But with Amoeba Music’s future more uncertain now than ever, the massive independent record store is turning to its devotees for nearly half a million dollars to try to stay afloat.

In an essay on GoFundMe, Amoeba cofounders Dave Prinz and Marc Weinstein recount the history of their indie record shop, from its founding 30 years ago in the Bay Area (where Amoeba still operates its two stores) to its current hardship: that all three stores have been temporarily closed since the middle of March, and will remain so indefinitely.

“With no way to generate income, our savings are running out, with bills and rent coming due, and with a primary commitment to our staff, who we are trying to keep as healthy and financially sound as possible” they wrote on the GoFundMe. As a result, and with what its founders describe as no guarantee of federal and local grants and loans, the record store is attempting to raise $400,000 in donations to cover its 400 out-of-work employees (about 300 of those based in L.A.) as well as basic operation needs.

Part of those donations will help fund the store’s move this fall to its recently-unveiled new home at the corner of Hollywood Boulevard and Argyle Avenue. In an interview with Variety, Weinstein says that he’d like to be able to reopen the Sunset Boulevard location, but that his main focus is on getting the new Hollywood shop ready. While Amoeba’s mail order business has been busy lately, Weinstein estimates it’s doing about 10% of the Hollywood location’s usual retail business—not nearly enough to sustain all three stores, and hence the timing for this fundraiser.   

As rumors began to swirl a couple years ago about Amoeba vacating its Sunset space, Angelenos seemed to talk about the record store like a landmark that had always been there. The fact that Amoeba only opened its Hollywood location in 2001 (admittedly aeons for L.A.’s retail world) speaks to just how much it’s cemented itself as a pillar of L.A.’s music culture in a relatively short amount of time (alright, maybe free concerts from the likes of the Raconteurs, Jenny Lewis, Weezer, Brian Wilson, Robyn, the Smashing Pumpkins and Elvis Costello helped a bit, too).

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