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Inside Derby’s Last Record Shop: Every Day is Record Store Day at BPM Records

Inside Derby’s hidden vinyl shop where records still truly matter

Culture

20th April 2026


Text By

K Futur

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Tucked just off Sadler Gate, easy to miss if you are not looking for it, BPM Records sits quietly as one of the most important cultural spaces in the city. On Record Store Day last Saturday, the shop drew in a steady stream of people who knew exactly what they were coming for.

Set within a historic Derby building, BPM Records feels rooted in something deeper than retail. The character of the space is immediate. Worn wood, tightly packed shelves and the sense that music has been moving through these walls for decades. It is the kind of place that carries its history naturally, without needing to explain it.

You will occasionally spot a BPM tote bag out and about in Derby, a small nod to those who know the shop, but inside is where its real identity lives.



In a city where record shops have gradually disappeared, BPM Records has become the place people return to. Not out of nostalgia, but because it continues to offer something real.

The selection on Record Store Day reflected that. There was no sense of bulk buying or chasing trends. Instead, the records felt carefully chosen, spanning genres and generations with a clear emphasis on quality. Whether you were flicking through older pressings or newer releases, there was a consistency to what was on offer that suggested experience rather than opportunism.

A record player spun throughout the day, filling the space with that unmistakable analogue warmth. It was not there for show. It simply felt like part of the shop’s rhythm, reinforcing why places like this still matter.

When Record Store Day was mentioned to a member of staff, the response came quickly and without hesitation.

“Every day is record store day, other than Sundays.”

It was said with a quiet confidence that summed up the shop’s approach. No gimmicks, no reliance on a single day to define what they do. Just a consistent dedication to records and the people who care about them.

That same commitment is visible across the shop. Posters for local bands and upcoming shows cover almost every available space. It is impossible to stand in one spot without spotting something new. The shop doubles as a noticeboard for Derby’s grassroots music scene, a place where local artists are given visibility alongside the records themselves.



Behind it all is the owner’s long history in the business. Years of experience are reflected in the way the shop is run, from the selection on the shelves to the knowledge shared across the counter. This is not a shop built on passing trends. It is built on understanding music, understanding people and staying consistent over time.

That authenticity is what keeps BPM Records going. In a city that has seen these kinds of spaces fade away, it continues to stand firm by doing things properly.

Record Store Day may bring people through the door, but at BPM Records, it is clear that the doors have always been open for the same reason. The records come first, and they always have.


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