When two blues legends took the stage in Wilson Library last November, students Reed Turchi and Andrew Hamlet jumped at the chance to record them.
Turchi and Hamlet, both presidents of local student record companies, recorded Alfred “Uganda” Roberts and John “Jojo” Hermann when they performed at Wilson Library on Nov. 16.
“This is the first time (Vinyl Records has) gotten to record professional musicians in our studio,” said Hamlet, president of Vinyl Records.
Vinyl Records traditionally records the music of student artists at the University. But Hamlet saw something different with Roberts and Hermann.
“This is the first opportunity for us to have an artistic product that people outside of the community might desire,” Hamlet, a senior, said.
Vinyl Records and Turchi’s Devil Down Records are releasing a limited 7-inch record with two songs.
Each copy will be hand-signed and numbered. Profits will go to the New Orleans Musicians’ Clinic and Vinyl Records, Turchi said.
Turchi is the president of Devil Down Records, a label he started as a project in an arts entrepreneurship class.
But he said the label was always something he considered to be real beyond the classroom.