LaLaLaLaura wrote:
The greatest part of these record are the handwritten reviews! And the very unique klsu grafitti that I am sure lives on....
I agree completely- I was there in the late 90's and remember the massive collection. I used to read the handwritten reviews and be fascinated. Great stuff and a huge amount of work by some pretty cool people.
I also remember when they decided to get rid of the records. Some afternoon, I showed up and there were people going through them; basically people were welcome to take whatever they wanted. Within a few days, everything was tossed in the dumpster except for the hop hop vinyl. I thought it was a huge shame but for whatever reason the stuff was never going to be played on the air, so I hope most of it wound up in the hands of people who would appreciate it... and the handwritten reviews.
Sorry to hear the rest of you are so embarassed by what we were doing in the late 90's. Don't assume we weren't frustrated too... way too many songs on heavy rotation for starters. I remember a period of about a month when you'd come in for your shift and be guaranteed you'd play Intergallactic by the Beastie Boys because we literally played it every 3 hours.
Who, working there then, didn't have a few KLSU cd's in their stacks? We all had discs with the little white label taped on the upper portion with a code such as "BE65" or some such. And the other poster is dead on with the guess many were sold to used music stores. It actually became a big enough deal that they had to call these used music stores and beg them to help crack down on this. Not sure if anyone was ever caught.