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Tuesday, June 3
 

2:50pm CDT

GEN Z'S PASSION FOR VINYL
Tuesday June 3, 2025 2:50pm - 3:05pm CDT
The Vinyl Alliance presents groundbreaking new research on the attitudes, behaviors, and motivations of Gen Z vinyl fans, drawing upon 2,500 survey responses, a dedicated Gen Z focus group, expert interviews, and deep industry analysis. This presentation will explore the key findings, which reveal a nuanced picture of why young listeners are embracing vinyl in 2025 — not just for music, but for identity, mental well-being, a sense of community, and more. VA General Manager Ryan Mitrovich will share insights that will help labels, artists, and retailers better understand and engage with the next generation of collectors.
Speakers
avatar for Ryan Mitrovich

Ryan Mitrovich

General Manager, Vinyl Alliance
As General Manager of the Vinyl Alliance, Ryan Mitrovich drives the organization’s efforts enabling collaboration among the global vinyl record industry, in pursuit of its mission to strengthen the position of vinyl records in a digital world. In the role since 2022, Ryan has led... Read More →
Tuesday June 3, 2025 2:50pm - 3:05pm CDT
Ballroom C, Level 2

4:35pm CDT

DUST & GROOVES: ADVENTURES IN RECORD COLLECTING
Tuesday June 3, 2025 4:35pm - 5:00pm CDT
Photographer Eilon Paz has travelled the world to capture a total portrait of global record collecting culture in his definitive Dust & Grooves project. Ten years since his best-selling Dust & Grooves Vol. 1,  Vol. 2: Further Adventures in Record Collecting demonstrates that vinyl is more than a format—it’s a lifestyle. Dust & Grooves celebrates everyday collectors alongside music royalty. Four Tet, Questlove (The Roots, The Tonight Show, Jay-Z, D’Angelo), jazz icon Ron Carter (Miles Davis bassist 1963-1968), comedian Eric Andre, punk filmmaker Don Letts, A-Trak, Floating Points, Stones Throw Records founder Peanut Butter Wolf, Nabihah Iqbal, Quantic, DāM-FunK, and the family of the late BBC DJ John Peel are just some of the collectors captured across both volumes – with over 150 collectors in the new Vol. 2 alone. Paz has rare insight into
 the cultural impact of records, the resurgence of vinyl as a luxury product, and how collectors, DJs, and music lovers shape the industry’s future.
Speakers
avatar for Larry S Jaffee

Larry S Jaffee

Co-Founder, Making Vinyl
Larry Jaffee, the author of Record Store Day: The Most Improbable Comeback of the 21st Century, is a New York-based journalist whose writing has been appeared in The New York Times, Rolling Stone, Billboard, among numerous other publications. Music has been Jaffee’s passion since... Read More →
avatar for Eilon Paz

Eilon Paz

Founder, Dust & Grooves Editions
Founder of Dust & Grooves | Creator of Stompbox Books | Creative Mind | Book Publisher | Mixed Media Creator
Tuesday June 3, 2025 4:35pm - 5:00pm CDT
Ballroom C, Level 2
 
Wednesday, June 4
 

12:15pm CDT

JERRY PHILLIPS: FROM HANGING OUT WITH ELVIS AS A KID TO RUNNING SAM PHILLIPS RECORDING SERVICE
Wednesday June 4, 2025 12:15pm - 12:50pm CDT
He's the son of rock and roll, so you know that on Jerry Phillips' debut album For the Universe (released in 2024), he's gonna rip hard. As a kid, his late-night hangout pals were Elvis Presley, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lee Lewis, because they all hung with his dad, Sam Phillips, who founded Sun Records, the studio and record label. Us rock and roll fans, we heard the music—Jerry was baptized in it.
Jerry's made plenty of records. With his band the Jesters, he recorded "Cadillac Man" for Sun Records, a highlight of the original label's last years. He's produced plenty of albums too, including soul music for Stax and with his brother Knox they made one of John Prine's greatest, Pink Cadillac.
But sometimes it takes a lifetime to get to your own album. With this one, Jerry invites you to sidle up to the bar on the third floor of the Sam Phillips Recording Service in Memphis, Tennessee. This is the studio that he recently refurbished, keeping Sam's design intact and enhancing the control room's technology, grit and funk. At the bar, he points out where the original Formica still has just one cigarette burn scar on it—Johnny Cash, early 1960s.
As soon as he begins to chat, his stories become the songs on this album, and without making a move you find yourself closer and closer to Jerry, and the bar morphs, putting you in an excited crowd, colorful lights, thick smoke and it's just after last call when the doors get locked, the liquor flows, the dance floor fills. Jerry is at the mic leading a band, and whether he's talking or singing you're just as intent because of his great casual delivery, a sweet spot between hymn singing, telling a secret and holding the tension before delivering a punchline.
With "Number One Girl," this beast kicks off like the solo record that Mick Jagger has not been able to achieve. Jerry doesn't sing like Mick, but he can rock like Mick, and that's what For the Universe is here to tell you: We gonna rock.
And to prove how we'll be rockin', this natural born rocker Jerry dang Phillips stole the song title "That's All Right," the title that might be most associated with his family and his heritage and he wrote his own damn song to it—on his debut album. Step aside Big Boy Crudup and Elvis Presley.
But like you know from hanging at that bar, the good-natured Mr. Phillips is not just about playing hard. He's ready to cha-cha with your girlfriend that he just stole on "Treat Her Like She's Mine," and he's praising her like you shoulda on the cooing "I Like Everything I See." You can't stand by on "Specify" when he testifies for love.
With "Good Side, Bad Side, Side of Crazy Too, " you have to lean in—the steel guitar cries like a country weeper, Jerry's spoken intro vulnerable like a confession. It's intimate and intense, puts us solidly at that bar, makes us want to buy him a drink, maybe hug him too.
There's background girls singing "whoa-whoa," you'll hear Wurlitzer electric piano noodlings and honky tonk tack piano pounding. There's wailing harmonica and guitars, choogling rhythms, and definitely your own fingers snapping with "24-6 Not 7," one of the truest love songs ever. There's some ballads here. A taste of country, a taste of doo wop. You know what it took to concoct rock and roll, so you're gonna hear a lot of influences here.
And you're gonna hear some of the best Memphis players from across the generations, reaching back to Spooner Oldham, sweeping in Jerry's daughter Halley, who is one of the album's producers along with Scott Bomar, the studio's successor-to-Roland-Janes. Many Memphis players have made some of their career finest music in the Phillips' family studio and they, like me, ran to say yes when Jerry rang for accompaniment.
Jerry Phillips likes to have a good time. And this record is his testament to that. He had me in mind when he made it, he had you in mind—and look out, I think he had your sister in mind too. But that's fine, his intentions are good. Jerry's message is for the universe.
Rock on.
--Robert Gordon, Memphis, 2024


Speakers
avatar for Robert Gordon

Robert Gordon

Author, It Came Out of Memphis
Emmy and Grammy Award winning writer Robert Gordon is the author of 6 books, and producer/director of 8 feature documentaries. He has focused on the American south—its music, art, and politics—to create an insider’s portrait of his home that is both nuanced and ribald.Gordon’s... Read More →
avatar for Jerry Phillips

Jerry Phillips

Sam Phillips recordings
The myriad of stars that aligned to create Jerry Phillips’ debut solo album, For The Universe, have been orbiting the rarified atmosphere of Memphis’s Sam Phillips Recording Service — the namesake studio that Jerry’s father built in the wake of his Sun Records success with... Read More →
Wednesday June 4, 2025 12:15pm - 12:50pm CDT
Ballroom C, Level 2
 
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