That "Wow" Moment!


So I am at my local record shop store. Retired pharmacist. Had a big collection. Decided to open a brick and mortar business. Great couple and I love going there once a week and spending my money to support them. My panacea. Anyways there is an album on his system and my ears/brain immediately tune to it and ask "Who is this"? He says the name of the band whom I have never heard of before today. I say, "Will you sell it"? He says, "Sure". I bring it home and put on my system and it is a "You have got to be kidding me moment". Wow! Weren't they outstanding! Savoy Brown is the band. "Looking In" is the album from 1971. Please chime in on your similiar experiences of discovering a sound you didn't know was out there.
ricmci
Similar experience .. Mark Knopfler "Kill to Get Crimson" was playing. Thankfully it was it stock. 
@dweller - Love Chris Whitley. His daughter Trixie has done a few good things as well.
As to my introduction to a band/album playing in a record store, it was Elvis Hitler’s "Disgraceland" and the track "Green Haze" which is a cover of "Purple Haze" with the lyrics from the "Green Acres" tv show theme song. First pressings in lo-rent cardboard box with sellotaped cover art: https://www.discogs.com/sell/release/1547026?ev=rb
Wanghead Records. Don’t settle for the reissue. :)
Store was the CBGB's record store and cafe. Never ate there. 

A guy I knew my Senior year of High School who was mentally ill (Seriously. He should have been on meds, but that wasn't common at the time), and he participated in all kinds of bad behavior (He recklessly put both our lives at risk on one occasion, the last time I would get in a car with him.). But one of them I couldn't resist taking advantage of; he would boost armfulls of LP's from the drug and variety stores that sold them back then. He invited me to pick out a bunch I wanted, which I did (Yes, I'm ashamed.). He then went into the store and brought them out under his jacket (He was fearless). He brought out a stack of LP's all right, but it was not the stack I had assembled!

Amongst the LP's he boosted was The Beach Boys Smiley Smile album. It had been years since I heard one of their albums, having lost interest in them after 1964's All Summer Long. They had become extremely unfashionable in the time of Cream, Hendrix, The Grateful Dead, the doors, etc., but I listened to it anyway. Holy sh*t, what the H*ll is this?! My little teenage mind was blown!! I had by then heard some very strange music, but this was truly revolutionary, unlike anything I had heard (I wouldn't hear Stravinsky and Penderecki for a few more years ;-). So began my years-long obsession with the Brian Wilson/Smile saga.

Next: I read a quote from Merle Haggard in praise of Iris Dement, but that in no way prepared me for what I would hear when I listened to her My Life, an album that changed my life. I was left speechless, an emotional wreck. My God, this is what it's all about. She is as good as Pop (non-Classical) music gets.


Had a similar experience last week at one of my favorite vinyl haunts. The band is El Ten Eleven (like the plane on the cover).

I found a copy on the record label’s site and it’s on its way.

And, Savoy Brown is very cool.