Woodfield Mall and it's chains.
In August 1971, this mega-mall opened in Schaumburg, IL, a Chicago suburb. Immediately, its' Sears was the biggest volume location in their chain. The other anchor tenants were Marshall Field (now Macy's) and Penneys. It was named for Sears' Arthur Wood and Marshall Field. Those anchors are still there today, along with Nordstrom and Lord & Taylor. These days, despite many malls being on life support or dead, the mall thrives. When it opened it had three levels (in spots) and 200 stores. Today, it's 350 stores and still thriving. If you live in/around Chicago, you've been to Woodfield.
In it's early days, Woodfield had three record stores: Disc Records and TWO Musicland's. Since I was friends with the managers at all three, I got employee prices and unlimited exchanges on anything in print. Penneys, Sears, Kresge and Osco Drug all carried records. Schaak Electronics carried pre-recorded tapes, including a nice Q8 selection. So, that totaled eight stores that carried prerecorded music, six of them selling Quad! Later, they hosted JR's Music Shop and Sam Goody's chains. Today, there is a fairly large FYE.
In more recent times, there was a huge Tower Records store across from Woodfield, pictures posted earlier in this thread. A huge Borders was also across the street, with an entire level dedicated to music & video. Circuit City and Sound Warehouse were nearby. Best Buy and Barnes & Noble are still in the neighborhood. We'll explore Sound Warehouse in a later post, as well as J.R.'s Music Shop.
When I was a manufacturer's rep, I spent a week each month in Minneapolis calling on accounts. I cold called a building on Wayzata Blvd. (US 12.) It looked like small potatoes. Most of the building was below grade. Turned out, it was the headquarters of of Musicland, which was then the largest record store chain in the US. Most malls had one. Woodfield was the only mall I'd ever been in that had two! Many of Musicland's stores later became Sam Goody's. Musicland had a decent selection and great bargains on cutouts. Virtually all malls in IL, WI, MN and many other places had one. We'll also explore Sam Goody (Goody Got it!) in a later post.
Golden Ring Mall Musicland in suburban Baltimore, MD
it's in the bag
Disc Records had a better selection than Musicland, but still had high prices. They stocked virtually every domestic Quad. It was the best record store that Woodfield ever housed! I recall one other Disc Records store around Chicago in Hawthorn Center in Vernon Hills, IL. Sorry, I couldn't find any pictures of Disc Records. They had dozens of stores, as I found listed on an ad on the back cover of a Schwann Record Guide. I recall several being in Ohio. If anyone has any memories of Disc Records, please share them. Pictures, too, if you can find them.