Russ Solomon, the founder of the enormously influential and widely beloved Tower Records chain, has died at age 92.
His son, Michael Solomon, told the Sacramento Bee on Monday that his father died of an apparent heart attack on Sunday evening while watching the Oscar awards ceremony and enjoying a glass of whiskey.
Solomon started his record store as an offshoot of his father’s drugstore before building it into a separate retailer. At its peak as a mecca for music lovers, Tower boasted stores and licensees across the U.S., with its signature yellow-and-red signs also blazing in London, Buenos Aires and Tokyo. Music fans and musicians alike made pilgrimages to Tower’s stores. As Bruce Springsteen said in All Things Must Pass, director Colin Hanks’ 2015 documentary about the chain, “If you came into town, you went to Tower Records.”
Its successes spurred the expansion of other music mega-retailers like HMV and Virgin. Each of its stores had a unique retail profile, often tied to its geographical location: the store in Nashville, for example, offered a huge selection of country music, while the Tower next to Lincoln Center in New York City boasted an unparalleled stock of classical titles.
But in 2006, Tower declared bankruptcy.