Looney Tunes' new home

As the Vinyl Turns
By TOM KIELTY  |  May 2, 2012

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VINYL SUPERSTORE Pat McGrath is moving Looney Tunes to Allston, and merging the venerable
shop with Wayne Valdez's Store 54.

Pat McGrath is a realist. The venerable owner of landmark local indie record store Looney Tunes could see that, despite the 33 years he had been a part of the Boston music fabric, his days on Boylston Street in the heart of Berklee College of Music territory were numbered.

He also knew that he didn't have a lot of time to plot his next move when Berklee informed him it was time to go.

"Right now, we're dealing with the situation of a massive clusterfuck," he says of the daunting task of relocating, by his own estimation, "a couple of hundred thousand" records.

"Trying to get stuff out, get it in, not a tidy affair," he says.

Luckily, local vinyl junkies need not despair. McGrath and all those Looney Tunes have found a new home at 16 Harvard Avenue in Allston, across the street from O'Brien's Pub, where they will merge with Wayne Valdez and his Store 54 to create what amounts to a Boston music supermarket. The two hope to be up and running within the month, with the Store 54 Facebook page being the most reliable spot to find updates.

"You've got two guys with, like, 60 years of experience with recycling and building community," says Valdez of the merger. "The vinyl's been driving me, so I know there's a lot of business in that, and now I'll just focus on the related: cool objects, clothes, books, all with a theme running through it. We like art, music, literature."

Though McGrath plans to devote a good portion of his energies to wholesaling the massive Looney Tunes inventory, he is excited about putting his best product on retail sale. Of the roughly 1600 square feet of sales space at 16 Harvard, Valdez guesses that Looney Tunes will take some two-thirds, leaving room for Store 54 to continue with occasional live shows. "We might have a space challenge," he admits, "but we'll work it out."

Amidst McGrath's vinyl selections, Valdez and girlfriend, Janice Maestas, an audio tech who has helped stock Store 54 with musical gear as well as clothing, will position their own offerings.

For his part, McGrath holds no ill will toward his former landlord, though he does question what role his successor (reportedly the J.P. Licks that recently left Newbury Street) has to offer a music school.

"I know that ice cream is important," he says with a smile. "But they teach turntablism at Berklee and you'd have a bitch of a time putting a waffle cone on a turntable."

Related: Review: Ice Age: Dawn of the Dinosaurs, From away, here to stay: Out-of-towners settle down in Maine, Interview: Pat McGrath on the strange, cruel, beautiful life of Billy Ruane, More more >
  Topics: This Just In , Looney Tunes, moving, record stores
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