2023-11-24 13:52:00
The original HMV store on London’s Oxford Street was forced to close in 2019 ( AFP / Ben Stansall )
Four years following closing its iconic store on Oxford Street in central London, British record store HMV reopened a store on Friday at the same address, raising hopes of a revival of the famously attractive shopping street. declining.
Since the bankruptcy of the record distributor which opened its first store on Oxford Street in 1921, the doorway had been replaced by a candy store, much to the dismay of Londoners and music fans.
But on Friday, the British group’s logo – a dog listening to the voice of its deceased master in a gramophone, hence the name “His Master’s Voice” (HMV, “The Voice of His Master”) – regained its place on the facade of 363 Oxford Street.
The store was opened by the British group Madness, at the height of their fame in the 1980s with their ska hits, and its owner Doug Putman with his dog Ollie, who looks like the one in the logo.
He hailed a “great moment”, which testifies to the “positive direction of things”. “It’s all regarding balance,” he said, delighted that the record store will find its place among the candy and souvenir shops that now abound on Oxford Street.
The new store will “reflect the evolution of HMV’s retail concept”, with space for shows and signings, and “a wide range of pop culture items”, according to the group.
It’s “exactly what we want Oxford Street to be: an experience beyond traditional retail,” Geoff Barraclough, a member of Westminster City Council, told AFP, welcoming this reopening.
The HMV store on Oxford Street made music history in 1962 when Brian Epstein, the Beatles’ manager, brought a copy of their demo tape there which was noticed by producers at EMI, the house of record then-owner of HMV, helping the group secure a recording contract.
The iconic brand has since been faced with persistent financial difficulties, once morest a backdrop of a depressed record market in the face of competition from online music. HMV filed for bankruptcy at the end of 2018, following a first bankruptcy in 2013.
Canadian businessman Doug Putman, owner of the Sunrise group of record stores, then bought HMV for an undisclosed sum, but was forced to close 27 points of sale, including the emblematic one in the heart of London.
Four years later, the group has managed to return to profit, and announced in April that it would return “by popular demand” to its Oxford Street site before the Christmas holidays.
– Return of the excitement –
Like many Britons, Dave Jacobs, 60, a scaffolder in the capital, has fond memories of the time when he might browse record covers and buy music in this store.
In recent years it has been dominated by chain stores, souvenir and candy shops, while many big name retailers have closed ( AFP / Tolga Akmen )
He is not unhappy, moreover, that the numerous candy stores which, according to him, gave a “vulgar” appearance to Oxford Street are beginning to disappear from the landscape.
In recent years, the British capital’s main shopping street has changed its face, suffering from the closure of department stores like Debenhams and House of Fraser, and seeing dozens of confectionery and souvenir shops popping up during the Covid-19 pandemic. .
Much less prestigious, these shops are also accused by local authorities of questionable business practices, added to millions of pounds in unpaid business taxes.
Tourists like Brandy Fonds, 51, who came from the United States to visit London with her daughter, search in vain for typical businesses in the British capital, and deplore a street littered with garbage.
But for Geoff Barraclough, the reopening of the HMV store marks a turning point for Oxford Street: “the excitement is returning to one of the country’s most loved shopping streets,” he said.
The opening of an Ikea store, the first in the center of the British capital, is eagerly awaited there next year.
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