Tomorrow Records
Tomorrow Records Kathleen Marie / Mercury Staff

Portland is a vinyl town. Sure, coffee, bikes, and beer get all the headlines, but record hounds know the real truth: This is a city of DJs, and itโ€™s powered by 12-inch slabs of wax.

Naturally, Portland has an embarrassment of riches as far as places to score gifts for the vinyl lover in your life. And while there are too many great record stores to mention here, you canโ€™t make a wrong step with these terrific shops.

All true Portland record collectors have made the pilgrimage to Crossroads Records (8112 SE Foster), which boasts the biggest, baddest, best selection of used vinyl in the city. Crossroads is a multi-vendor mini-mall of record sellers, each one hosting a table of specialized wares. This is the place to go for deep crate digging, with ultra-rare obscurities sharing bin space with crowd-pleasing go-tos. Itโ€™s easy to lose the entire day browsing Crossroadsโ€™ countless binsโ€”and each vendor is organized separately, which makes searching for one thing in particular a blissfully time-consuming affairโ€”so block out a chunk of the afternoon and get ready to lug home an armful of choice LPs.

Music Millennium (3158 E Burnside) is another local gem, with new and used vinyl sharing bin space; you can also pick up CDs, movies, books, and other stuff. With in-store live shows, a beer-and-wine bar, and countless ties to the community, Music Millennium is, in many ways, the living room of the Portland record-loving set. Used vinyl prices are fair, and new stuff is often discounted; more importantly, the selectionโ€™s greatโ€”and they can special order just about anything thatโ€™s in print.

What Little Axe (4142 NE Sandy) doesnโ€™t have in size, it makes up for with a mind-boggingly well-chosen selection at ultra-fair prices. These guys are seasoned record hounds, and the store always has remarkable stuff you never see anywhere else, with an emphasis on little-heard gems from all around the globe.

Mississippi Records (5202 N Albina) is another of the cityโ€™s foundational record stores, and although its namesake label is now operated out of Chicago, this Portland landmark is still the place to score great folk, blues, and international music. You can also get rock, punk, and soul classics for terrific prices.

Tomorrow Records (700 SE Hawthorne) is still the (relative) new kid on the block, but itโ€™s already become an indispensible part of Portlandโ€™s vinyl eco-system. With a broad selection of genresโ€”they have particularly deep bins of jazz, prog, psych, and rockโ€”and a variety of vintage gear for sale, Tomorrow is a more-than-worthy addition to the cityโ€™s crowded record market.

This barely scratches the surface of Portlandโ€™s vinyl sceneโ€”smart gift givers will also check out great shops like 2nd Avenue Records, Musique Plastique, Clinton Street Records & Stereo, Speckโ€™s Records, Everyday Music, Jackpot Records, and countless others.

Ned Lannamann is a writer and editor in Portland, Oregon. He writes about film, music, TV, books, travel, tech, food, drink, outdoors, and other things.