http://yinandyango.livejournal.com/ (
yinandyango.livejournal.com) wrote in
fandomtownies2012-05-23 06:05 am
Entry tags:
Groovy Tunes; Wednesday [ 05/23 ].
Fawn was decidedly sulking today at work; she considered not even coming in at all, but figured that, in the long run, it was better to go and do something than stay in her room. Because she thought she would be glad to turn back into a human, but she realized that she was probably better off as a pony. As a pony, she was unique and odd, but she was pretty and intriguing. As a human, she realized she was relegated back to being a complete freak. She should have stayed a pony.
When she wasn't busy scrubbing down the counters until her hands hurt, Fawn was curled over a notebook, digging words so deep into the pages that the pen threatened to tear through the paper.
Groovy Tunes is open!
[[ and so is the post! ]]
When she wasn't busy scrubbing down the counters until her hands hurt, Fawn was curled over a notebook, digging words so deep into the pages that the pen threatened to tear through the paper.
Groovy Tunes is open!
[[ and so is the post! ]]

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The vinyl. The only thing that would have stabbed at his heart more would have been if the coffee had ruined a letter he carried at all times in his pocket, or if he'd gone tripping over his Stratocaster, instead.
But it was sort of like coming home when he stepped into the Groovy Tunes, even after so many years. He offered the girl at the counter a vague little smile, collar of his coat only slightly obscuring the bottom half of his face today, and then headed over to the records.
"How much grunge have you got in stock in LP format? I had a bit of an incident this morning, I have a fair amount to replace."
[SP for work today, but I really couldn't resist. Hiii.]
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But the man seemed to know where he was going, so she kept her head down until he started toward the records, only when she was sure she'd see mostly just his back did she lift her head to curiously look at him behind the safety of her curtain of hair. Then he actually spoke, and, like a deer springing into the woods, she lowered her head to pretend she'd never looked in the first place.
But there was a question, so she should probably answer, and she masticated her abused lower lip longer than it should have taken anyone to think of a response. Fawn shrugged. "I don't know," she admitted, "I'm new."
When she looked up, she had only meant to do so briefly, but she found her head tilting as she observed the customer more closely.
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But, well, he sucked at social outings, trips to the bars or the coffee shop where he could tuck himself away in a booth aside.
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"What happened to all your LPs?" she asked, feeling incredibly grateful that there hadn't been some sort of Freudian slip, and that it actually did come out at LPs and not something else with an extra letter in the middle.
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At least this way, he'd leave with an armload of vinyl.
"We were nearly all ponies over the weekend," he offered, leaning forward to ever-so-casually look over the selection. "I had wings. And the vinyl..." He exhaled a bit of a sigh, shaking his head. "Precariously stacked boxes, an alarm clock that I forgot to shut off, a mug of coffee, and a startled cat. The less said about that, the better."
It hurt too much to recall.
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"Maybe you should get one of those iPod things," she suggested lightly, in the manner of someone who really didn't know anything about it except by hearsay. "You wouldn't have to worry about precariously stacked boxes of music if it's all in a tiny little device."
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"Blasphemer," he accused, though there were the undertones of a smile somewhere in his voice, and lingering around the corner of his eyes. "That's all well and good for wandering about, but nothing compares to the sound that you get from vinyl. Nothing."
He would defend this opinion to his dying breath.
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He'd defend that one well beyond the grave, if need be.
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"And is that a good thing, or a bad thing?"
He personally couldn't see how it could possibly be a bad thing. At least for him, his sympathies to her brother if the poor bloke sounded anything like him in turn.
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The vinyl section was even bigger than the cassette section. It made her a little sad, since a tape player was all she had right now.
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He missed this place. Being surrounded by music, not having to deal with uppity actors who figured they belonged in the spotlight more than all the others... But so long as there was vinyl in stock, he didn't feel it was mandatory that he stage an intervention or something, either.
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"And what constitutes as running it properly?" she asked, emphasizing the last word in a decent mimic of the man's own pronunciation. She didn't have Cookie's gift for accent, but she could hold her own decently. "Obviously, the vinyl, but anything else?"
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It was a subtle barb, but he was mostly teasing. She was new. She'd been a pony over the weekend, probably for the first time. He wasn't going to hold that against anybody who wasn't used to the island's antics just yet.
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"And deprive the customer of the experience of getting to discover them for himself?" she asked.
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He nodded to the sound system behind the counter. "And besides, unless you want them judging an album by its cover, you'll need to be willing to let them have a listen before they pay anyhow."
Which wasn't something that a lot of music shops offered, but Jono had always seen it as half the fun of working at the Groovy Tunes, back when he was still a student.
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And it was powerful enough to swipe away any snark she might have managed a second ago. It's a miracle she made it through that day with only a few light seizures, really.
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He had a deep, abiding loathing for Feliz Navidad. And would forever, most likely.
"I didn't even think to ask, when are you from, luv?"
If she was from some point in the past, it would explain why she was working in the music shop but was so easily turned off of the sound system, really. He could sympathize, having come to the island from an era when MTV still actually played music.
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And her voice went a little defensive as she answered the question. "And I'm not from that far back. 1989."
Though, really, if this was a normal school in 2012, then most of her classmates wouldn't have even been born then...
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"I was from 1995 when I first wound up here, back in... 2009, I think it was. It all blurs together a bit. It's been near seven years since then, for me."
So, you know, he could relate to weird time things.
"I was only asking because I wanted to know if you were interested in a more thorough walk-through of the sound system, here. CDs weren't exactly the norm back in the eighties."
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"I should be able to figure it out," she reasoned. "If I can't figure it out, then I should really probably be working somewhere else."
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He glanced down at the vinyl that he was standing beside, tilting his head a little at it.
"In any case, you have a bit of catching up to do," he noted. "Though most of the music they play nowadays is utter shite."
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"So I guess if I said 'what's the point in catching up, then?' you'd tell me that most of it is utter shite, not all of it, and it's important to be open to new things, right?"
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"I was going to say that it was important to be able to be convincing when you tell your customers to avoid the Bieber, or else you might be found guilty of cruel and unusual treatment of an unsuspecting victim, but your answer works well, too."
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And thank goodness that Fawn's musical tastes ran in the complete opposite direction of most fourteen year old girls'.
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The Bieber. Not all that far from being one of those STDs they warned you about, really, no.
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"I've had more than my share of female friends around here who were... fans."
Rabid ones. Or personal friends of that kid, which was almost worse.
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"I'm so sorry," she said instead, with a modicum of sympathy.
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He pulled a handful of Pearl Jam LPs from the display, flipping through them to make certain that he hadn't picked up two of any one album, and then shrugged. "I prefer my music with a bit more substance. Or at least performed by people who have actually reached puberty."
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Okay, so he kind of just did.
"Jazz, I enjoy. And the blues. Ska. Reggae..." He could keep going. For just about forever. "It's good to see so many newcomers to the island with an appreciation for music, these days."
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At this point, she might have been fluffing her feathers, just a little.
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"Was making a decent living for myself playing pubs in London, once upon a time. Probably wasn't all that far from a record deal myself. It's difficult to cut music out entirely, once you've gotten a taste for it. Once it's in your blood, I mean."
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And just like that, with a dismissive shrug of her shoulders, the knob twisted and the valve shut off again.
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"Friend of mine that used to work here, my old roommate when I was still a student, George, I convinced her to pick up a drum set back when she was still new here. Always fancied starting a band here on the island, made a few attempts at it here and there, me on guitar, but people come and go like the tides. Good luck to anyone hoping to keep a group together once you get it going."
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And such a voice, for someone without a mouth, a throat, lungs...
"Sounds like one hell of a man," he decided.