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The Midnight Hour Records Shop Is A Love Letter To Northeast Valley Kids

Rows of shelves display vinyl records as a man in dark clothing shops in the background. The logo of The Midnight Hour Records, which is a black background and white lettering, is displayed at the middle of the store.
A customer flips through musical records at The Midnight Hour Records in San Fernando.
(
Julie Leopo
/
for LAist
)
Listen 15:35
Finding The Beat: Music In The San Fernando Valley

As a kid who went to high school and college (go, Matadors!) in the 818, I know how sleepy the northeast San Fernando Valley can feel.

Sure, now there are cute brunch places and street corridors that almost feel city-like, pero no match to Highland Park’s York Avenue.

That isn’t shade to my dear section of the Valley, that’s just how things have been. But just because things are sleepy, it doesn’t mean arts and culture — predominantly defined by Latino and immigrant communities — isn’t here.

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The Brief

Enter Sergio Amalfitano and his shop, The Midnight Hour Records.

Records, apparel and music center

Midnight Hour is a musical hub in the city of San Fernando. It's been located at the downtown San Fernando Mall since August 2021. The space houses records more than anything, but they also sell clothing, tapes, toys, jewelry, posters, socks, pins. Aside from the records, I would say it's the perfect gift shop for the music or the 818 lover.

The space also transforms into a venue supporting local artists, like photographers and musicians. At the center, there’s a medium-sized platform stage, and Sergio zig zags the record shelves and cases so a few hundred people can fit into the space.

A light-skin man wearing a black long sleeve and hat poses for a photo behind a counter. He is surrounded by merchandise.
Sergio Amalfitano, owner of The Midnight Hour Records in San Fernando.
(
Julie Leopo
/
for LAist
)

“I just try to use it as much as possible as a community space, not just commodities,” Amalfitano says. “I try to bring in culture and records and music and expression.”

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Music across Los Angeles

The expression he’s mentioning is rooted in Latino and Chicano culture — spanning from rock en español, punk to boogie tunes and funk. Amalfitano calls the varying genres of music the Southern California culture of “everybody clashing and creating this thing together.”

Amalfitano, who lives in neighboring Sylmar and is of Argentine descent, and a product of the other valley — the SGV — wanted to better represent the talent, artists and vendors who have been here for years.

The shop has hosted punk shows for local bands like Cosmic Joke and events like the 818 Zine Fest. In February, the shop will host a pop up market, “Valley Times Day.”

Music history in the 818

Just a few blocks away from his shop in San Fernando, Dawnbreaker Studios once stood and delivered American hits. It was the studio for Seals and Crofts, and artists like Michael Jackson and Chaka Khan recorded there. Boogie was one genre that came out of that studio.

Amalfitano also gives a nod to guitarist Al McKay (from Earth, Wind and Fire) who had a band in the area, and Richie Valens, whom he considers the grandfather of Chicano rock, from nearby Pacoima. Other local shops back then, he says, put out records that ended up on the East Side Story music collection.

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“These are kinds of things that mean a lot to our culture — lowrider culture, Chicano, Latino culture,” he says. “They were DIY. They weren't given the time of day by mainstream record labels, so they put it up themselves.”

Several flags from music artists including Selena and My Chemical Romance are hung up on a white wall.
Flags, clothing, and accessories relevant to Southern California music culture are sold at The Midnight Hour Records.
(
Julie Leopo
/
for LAist
)

Bicultural, bilingual identities

As I chat with Amalfitano, I’m reminded of the bilingual and/or bicultural setting many of us L.A. Latino kids grow up with. Listening to hip-hop and R&B and later going to quinceañeras and bumping cumbias and norteñas. He also mentions the backyard punk shows that blend audiences in the same night — rockeros and later cholos or boogie fans.

Amalfitano says he’s always wanted to represent that at his shop.

“I feel like it's the Selena thing,” he says, referring to Selena Quintanilla’s “no sabo” moments. “We're not one thing too much or one thing the other way, you know? So we try to cross that line or walk that line of being American and Latin at the same time.”

It's like Amalfitano is trying to help kids like him — Latino, bicultural, from a working-class background — feel seen.

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“I wish I had this type of space when I was a kid,” Amalfitano says. “Not too many existed like this. I'm just trying to fulfill that dream as a kid.”

I was surprised when I walked into the shop and saw two Pride flags hanging at the storefront. I’m not sure I would’ve seen this display of allyship at a San Fernando business 10 years ago.

An image of a street with pedestrians waiting at a crosswalk, with a white building with tile roofing in the background.
The Midnight Hour Records store front at the downtown San Fernando Mall.
(
Julie Leopo
/
for LAist
)
I wish I had this type of space when I was a kid. Not too many existed like this. I'm just trying to fulfill that dream as a kid.
— Sergio Amalfitano, owner of The Midnight Hour Records

He’s gotten a few negative comments about the flags, but says he wants it to be known that they’re accepting of everybody and wants queer folks to feel represented as part of the northeast Valley community.

Maybe that’s why I loved being in his shop so much: I also wish I had this space as a gay, Latino kid in my sleepy northeast Valley when I lived here.

Artist recommendations

We asked him what bands and artists to watch from the Valley.

Mal Form

Fatal Wounds

God's Hate

Cosmic Joke

Tough Front

If you go

The Midnight Hour Records store is open daily, 12 - 7 p.m. at the downtown San Fernando Mall.

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