There are record stores that sell you the album and there are rooms that let you hear it played — Painted Lady is both, on the same stretch of Commercial Drive.
Walk in and the bins are right there: new pressings near the front, used crates further back, the kind of second-hand spread you flip through slowly because you never know what's in it. It is a shop built for the dig — for the afternoon that disappears one sleeve at a time.
But the thing that sets it apart is at the back. There's a stage — a small one, built for sound — and on the right night the same room that holds the crates holds a show. It is the rare shop where the music doesn't stop at the till; it gets plugged in and played for whoever's standing there.

The crowd it draws is a Drive crowd: people who still want the object, the sleeve, the warm static before the first track. They come for a record and stay for whoever happens to be soundchecking. They send each other here.
That's the story this page is trying to tell — a corner shop where the listening is the point, both ways, and the stage is as much a fixture as the turntable behind the counter.


"A stage built for sound, and a wall of records to fill it."

