Today we interview Fred Spider, the owner and manager of Voom Voom Records & Vintage from Cape Town in South Africa.
Voom Voom Records & Vintage is a record store in Cape Town, South Africa. In this interview, we wanted you to meet the people behind Voom Voom, get a glimpse behind the scenes of the place where you buy your favourite albums and see what it takes to run a successful record store.
Hi Fred, how did you start the store?
How is the scene in Cape Town? How has the business evolved over the years?
What is the daily routine at the shop? How many people work?
The good thing there is no really routine, you can’t get bored, everyday is a bit different, we meet new people everyday, we listen to new records everyday and we have new clothes everyday! We are 2 shops under the same roof, 200m2, its a big shop. During the week we are around 4 to 6. On week-ends, it’s amazing, the shop is REEEEALLY pumping, we can get over 500 to 600 people coming between Friday and Sunday. We are 8 to work. Last year the Saturday before the festival Afrika Burn, I believe we had around 600 persons coming on a Saturday only! We were around 10 staff. As I’m also a dj (Fred Spider), I’m playing Saturdays afternoon, music is quite loud, people are dancing while they are shopping and having fun. We do live music every 2 months with bands.
Who shops at Voom Voom? What kind of customers? DJs? Collectors? Do you have any interesting regular customers?
Because of the fact to mix records, bric a brac and vintage clothes, we have absolutely all kind of people coming. Some funky youngsters, students, some classy women and men, some workers, some record collectors, Dj’s, photographers, some Antique shops, cinema agencies, theaters, some foreigners, blacks people, colored, whites, Indian or any tourists from 16 years old to 70. Some guys are coming 3 times a week for a couple of years now. We know them well. But there is a commun vibe to everyone as you don’t enter in a shop like Voom Voom by coincidence.
If you had to give advice to someone who wanted to start their own store, what would it be?
The best and worst of having your own store?
Best thing is that I learnt a lot about clothes and music. Now I can recognize how old the clothes are and just looking at the lining, the brand tag, or buttons I can tell more or less what year it has been manufactured. I keep on discovering the amazing music, chatting to your customers you also always learn. There is no worst thing actually.
What record was really meaningful for the store? Any disc that has been super successful over the years?
What labels or artists have caught your attention lately and would you recommend?
Written and researched by Vincent Livolsi