On Gertrude Street, a shop the width of a single shopfront has spent more than two decades restocking a very specific corner of music: soul, funk, reggae, disco, house and hip-hop, sold on vinyl to the near-exclusion of everything else. It opened in 2002 under an owner with direct connections across international soul and funk labels, which shows in the shelves: new 45s and rare pressings brought in from overseas sit next to local releases the shop has actively sought out rather than waited to be pitched. It functions as an archive for home-grown black music as much as a retailer, stocking Naarm's future soul scene, First Nations hip-hop and heritage Australian jazz alongside the imports, treating local pressings as worth the same shelf space as anything shipped in. In-store listening posts let customers cue up a record before committing, an old-fashioned courtesy increasingly rare even among specialist stores. The shop also runs its own label and hosts in-store performances, extending its reach past retail into the scene it draws stock from. For DJs and collectors chasing a specific genre rather than browsing generally, it remains one of the few Melbourne stores built entirely around that logic.