Last night I went to an extended family reunion. Colin Hanks
and Sean Stuart's documentary All Things Must Pass: The Rise and Fall of Tower Records, kicked off the Sacramento Film Festival, appropriately enough, at the Tower Theatre, the site of where it all began, in Clayton Solomon's drugstore.
It may sound like the stuff of legends, but it's true. Tower
Records/Video/Books founder Russ Solomon built a $1 billion international
empire from a card table in a Sacramento drug store where he sold used 45 RPM
records from jukeboxes.
The filmmakers, who now live in L.A., grew up in Sacramento.
They hung out at Tower like most of their friends, but had no idea how the
company came to be. It wasn't until after the 2006 demise, that Hanks had a
friend tell him about the company starting in a drugstore and thought, "Now
that's a story." So began his quest to get that story on film.
Watching the history, from humble beginning to
heart-wrenching end, of the place I spent my formative years was emotional to
say the least. I was 22 when I walked into the bookstore that used to be on
Macy Plaza Drive in Citrus Heights and filled out a paper application (remember
those?) Twenty-two years later, it was all over. But I don't for a second
regret staying until the bitter end. I grew up on that ship; it was only right
to go down with it, surrounded by the people who had become family.
Last night was surreal at times, catching up with friends,
looking around at familiar faces I hadn't seen in a decade or more, riffling
through the mental rolodex to come up with a name, and feeling an energy that's
very difficult to describe. We've all obviously gotten older, but nostalgia and
pride are a powerful combination and I'll bet every one of us lifers was remembering
what it felt like to be a twenty-something newbie realizing that we'd just landed
the coolest job ever.
Hanks and Stuart were at the after-event, allowing us to
meet and talk to them. I was able to introduce myself to Hanks and thank him
for telling our story. At the end of the Q & A after the film, Hanks told
the crowd he hoped they'd one right by us. I assured him that they had. I also got to chat
with Russ for a bit. At 89, he's still as sharp as ever and still maintains
that it was us, the "kids in the stores," who made Tower successful. That's
true. But it was his vision that allowed us to avoid getting boring grown-up
jobs and get paid to have fun doing something we loved. I'm forever grateful to
have been a part of that amazing story. And while it's true that all things must indeed pass, some will live in our hearts forever.
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