1/2/2024 0 Comments Vinyl me please darkside![]() Down the road a few blocks: Victrola, which has been making turntables, under a variety of different names, for more than 100 years. Next to Mission Ballroom sits a three-story monolith that houses the offices of Anschutz Entertainment Group, better known as AEG-which owns the concert hall-and a Left Hand Brewing taproom. Looking out the front door, with Marley by my side, I could see Mission Ballroom, the crown jewel of Denver’s indoor concert venues, across the street. Along with Schaefer were Rich Kylberg, VMP’s chief strategy officer Gary Salstrom, a veteran of the record pressing business who will run operations and Salstrom’s dog, Marley. I visited 4201 Brighton on a cold, clear day this past January with Cameron Schaefer, the CEO of Vinyl Me, Please (VMP), the Denver-based record-of-the-month club that purchased the RiNo structure that will become the home of its new record pressing plant. Situated on an industrial stretch of Brighton Boulevard, roughly a football field’s distance from a cluster of train tracks on one side and the South Platte River on the other, sits an unremarkable building for which, if you are fanatical about music, there are remarkable plans in the making. The Local newsletter is your free, daily guide to life in Colorado. ![]() ![]()
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