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Bagatelle Records closed suddenly after 50 years. It will reopen under new ownership.

A man wearing jeans, a black tshirt and black rimmed eyeglasses stands while leaning against a blue and white cardboard box. He is surrounded by shelves and cardboard boxes filled with records.
Michael Vegh, who goes by the stage name Mike Vague, gets ready to sort through stacks of vinyl records as he prepares to reopen Bagatelle Records in Long Beach on March 10.
(
Thomas R. Cordova
/
Long Beach Post
)

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This article was originally published by the Long Beach Post, a nonprofit news organization.

After months of silent speakers and empty aisles, one of Long Beach’s favorite record stores is spinning back to life, giving music lovers and vinyl collectors the renewed thrill of flipping through records and rediscovering forgotten favorites.

Long cherished as a cornerstone of the local music scene, Bagatelle Records plans to reopen in April, bringing back thousands of vinyls to be sold at its shop at 260 Atlantic Ave. in downtown Long Beach.

For five decades, the store was a hub for music enthusiasts, offering rare records and guidance to both collectors and casual shoppers. Much of that reputation came from owner Steve Mintz, whose knowledge of vinyl and genuine care for everyone who walked through his doors kept customers coming back.

The store closed its doors when Mintz died late last year, disappointing regulars who had come to depend on it. Now, Mintz’s close friend, a longtime DJ and record collector who goes by the name Mike Vague, has taken over as owner.

After Mintz’s death, he’d been helping clear out the shop and was surprised at people’s reaction to seeing him inside.

“While I was in here cleaning up, people were pounding on the glass, saying, ‘When are you opening? Please open, please open,’” Vague said. “I’m 57 now, not 20. I started talking to people, and they made the transition simple and easy. We cut a deal, and I said, ‘OK, hold my nose and bite in.’”

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While the shop will reopen with the Bagatelle signage still in place, it will operate legally under the new name Mike Vague Records. However, Vague said he is committed to preserving the store’s spirit, in part by keeping prices that longtime customers remember.

“There are probably around just 250,000 records to be sold in the shop,” he said. “That means I’m going to be friendly. I’m not going to gauge if someone is asking $30 for a record. I’ll probably have it for $18. I’m going to keep the price point buyer friendly.”

A man with salt and pepper hair, wearing black rimmed eyeglasses, holds up a record album with the lower half of a man's face.
Michael Vegh holds up a Maxwell album in Long Beach on March 10.
(
Thomas R. Cordova
/
Long Beach Post
)

Right beside Vague will be Gary Page, an employee of the shop since the 1970s. In that time, Page has seen firsthand how much joy customers took in discovering rare records they sold.

“Record collecting is an amazing hobby and sometimes you have a copy that nobody has and all of a sudden everybody loves it,” Page said. “It’s a part of your history as you’re growing up, you’re listening to that stuff.”

For Page, the shop has always been about more than records; it’s about the culture and history of music. That connection to the past and the community is part of what makes the store’s return so meaningful.

“Thirty years later, you go back and you want that stuff again. You want to relive the better times that you had,” Page said.

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A man wearing an olive green baseball cap and wire rimmed eyeglasses leans on a table. The man has a white beard and is wearing a black and white polka dot scarf around his neck, a white long sleeved shirt and a black vest. On the table are stacks of CD's, cleaning supplies and a plastic water bottle. Behind him are shelves of records.
Gary Page helps to sort and clean stacks of vinyl records in Long Beach on Monday, March 10, 2026.
(
Thomas R. Cordova
/
Long Beach Post
)

As for Vague, he said he understands the care and attention Mintz brought to every customer at the shop and knows he can’t replicate it. Still, he hopes to honor that example by talking with regulars, tending the records and welcoming everyone who walks through the door as best he can.

“Steve was a very personable person. He always handed them water and liked to tell stories and listen to people’s stories. I have a little of that in me. I’m not shy,” Vague said.

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