Good news for Twin Cities music lovers ahead of Saturday’s annual Record Store Day: The corner storefront that previously housed two of Minneapolis’ best-loved record shops will soon be home to a new store for musicheads.
The former location of Oar Folkjokeopus and Treehouse Records, on the corner of Lyndale Avenue and 26th Street, will reopen as Lucky Cat Records this summer.
Former Treehouse owner Mark Trehus, who still owns the building, is leasing out the storefront to a local music fanatic who said she believes “the history of the space should live on.”
“It was that location specifically that got me thinking about opening a record store,” said Lucky Cat proprietor and first-time shop owner Michele Swanson. “It just seems like that’s what should be there.”
The site’s history centers around the store commonly known as just “Oar Folk,” where a scruffy young singer/songwriter named Paul Westerberg handed a demo tape to store clerk and future band manager Peter Jesperson in 1979 to jumpstart the Replacements.
Members of that band and many others regularly hung out there and at the kitty-corner dive bar CC Club in the late 1970s and ’80s, also including Hüsker Dü, the Suburbs and Suicide Commandos.
Oar Folk staffer Trehus took over the site and renamed it Treehouse in 2001, and for nearly two decades the site remained a hub for Twin Cities collectors and musicians. In 2017, however, Trehus decided to close his record shop and lease the space out to a more lucrative business.
“My initial thought was that the neighborhood had become so gentrified that a record store would not be able to justify the rent I was going to need to semi-retire on,” he said. “Michele was very persistent in insisting that she wanted the spot, and we worked something out.”