National Post (National Edition)

FAITH IN RECORD ‘RESURGENCE’ SPURS DEAL FOR HMV LOCATIONS.

- HOLLIE SHAW

Sunrise Records is betting big on the resurgence of CD and vinyl LP sales as the independen­t Ontario chain prepares to take over close to three-quarters of the storefront­s vacated by insolvent HMV Canada.

Toronto-based Sunrise, which opened its first store in 1977, has managed to survive through the industry bloodletti­ng that led to the demise of large and small music chains throughout North America. The ninestore chain announced over the weekend that it will take over 70 of HMV’s closing locations, and encouraged that chain’s employees to apply for jobs at the new stores.

“We have a belief there is a resurgence coming in the physical market,” Doug Putman, President of Sunrise Records, said in an interview Monday, citing the retailer’s solid sales of CDs and LPs despite more than a decade of steadily rising digital music sales. “As an industry (sales of physical music products) are shrinking, but we are not seeing that from a Sunrise perspectiv­e. We are seeing our CD business increase, and we are seeing our vinyl business increase.” It’s a point echoed by Indigo Books chief executive Heather Reisman, who has cited a stabilizat­ion in the market for physical book sales in recent years despite the introducti­on of e-books.

Putman purchased the then-struggling Sunrise chain in 2014, when it had five stores. His move to capitalize on the void left by HMV required him to negotiate individual­ly with landlords.

“It is a seven-figure investment, it is a lot of money, but we see a way for (the expanded business) to be a profitable chain.”

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It defies the odds in an industry that has seen the death of strong independen­t chains such as A&B Sound and Sam the Record Man. HMV, the last remaining music retailer of its size in Canada, announced in January that it would close all of its 102 stores. Sunrise will begin opening inside former HMV locations in April 2017.

Sunrise has broadened beyond its core base of products to include a variety of non-core products such as licensed fan apparel, movie and TV memorabili­a and board games.

It derives 60 per cent of its sales from music and 15 to 20 per cent from DVDs, with the remainder falling under the “other” category, which Putman would like to grow to 30 per cent or more of sales.

“We are seeing (CD) increases in the single digits, which is nothing crazy, but for an industry that posted a 20 per cent decline on CD sales, for us to show any growth we think is pretty amazing.” Vinyl has done even better, he said, outstrippi­ng the 30 per cent growth rate in the industry. “The business is triple for us what it was two years ago,” Putman said.

Stepping into vinyl early relative to other players, about seven years ago, also helped Sunrise establish itself among independen­ts as a place for vinyl, experts say. Sunrise’s managers are encouraged to curate record sections to target the musical tastes of the local markets where they operate.

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