North Dakota RSD FAQ
How many record stores are in North Dakota?
North Dakota has 13 active record stores spread across 5 distinct towns – the smallest record-retail footprint among the Great Plains states. Fargo (5 shops) leads the way, followed by Bismarck and Grand Forks (3 each), with single-shop anchors in Mandan and Minot. ND’s record retail is genuinely thin, concentrated on the Red River corridor (Fargo and Grand Forks) and the Missouri River corridor (Bismarck and Mandan). Crossing state lines, neighboring Minnesota sits east across the Red River (Fargo-Moorhead is functionally a twin cities, with Hawley Spin Depot just across in MN), Montana lies west across the Bakken oil-patch corridor, and South Dakota connects south through the I-29 corridor toward Sioux Falls.
What is North Dakota's oldest record store?
Budget Music & Video at 11 Main Street S in Minot has been a North Dakota institution since 1977, making it a 49-year staple of the state’s record-retail scene as it approaches its 50th anniversary in 2027. The shop’s “Independent since 1977!” branding is preserved in its Facebook handle “Budget1977”, carrying new and used records, CDs, DVDs, and Blu-ray across multiple generations of Minot collectors. Greater Grand Forks is served by Budget Music, described as the oldest record store in the Grand Forks area, sharing the Budget brand name with the Minot location.
What is Fargo's iconic indie record store?
Orange Records at 814 Main Avenue Suite 100 in downtown Fargo has been a North Dakota mainstay since July 23, 2007, making it an 18-year indie anchor of the city’s downtown commercial corridor. The shop carries new and used vinyl, CDs, DVDs, cassettes, posters, and t-shirts across genres, and was featured in The Current’s Fargo-Moorhead record-store guide in April 2026. Orange Records is the most consistent flagship for the Fargo cluster and a regular Record Store Day participant.
What other record stores are in Fargo?
Beyond Orange Records, Fargo hosts four additional shops including DTFM Vinyl Distro, LLC for the wholesale and distribution side of the local market, plus Electric Underground for the indie scene. Two multi-vendor antique-mall record sources round out the Fargo footprint: Den of Antiquity operates a booth inside First Avenue Market downtown, while Smokin’ Hot Records & Collectibles holds multiple booths inside the Fargo Antiques & Repurposed Market (known locally as The FARM).
What about Bismarck and Mandan record stores?
Bismarck and Mandan together carry 4 record stores across the Missouri River. Rhythm Records Music Cafe in Bismarck is a distinctive cafe-plus-records-plus-live-venue hybrid (Side B hosts live music), originally founded by Robbie Montgomery and Richard Lowen and now owned by Gus Lindgren since 2020. Bismarck also has two AMBIGUOUS-access shops: Generation Gap Records operates an online-primary model with physical-location-by-appointment access, while Music & More on Lockheed Drive runs weekend-only hours but stocks approximately 30,000 albums including an extensive Elvis section. Across the river in Mandan, Rare Bird Records at 2318 Memorial Highway is a recent addition – owner Steve Banyai opened the shop on October 28, 2024, carrying new and used vinyl, turntables, CDs, and cassettes as North Dakota’s newest record-retail entry.
What about Grand Forks record stores?
Grand Forks has three record stores beyond Budget Music. Ojata Records & Comics operates inside the DogMahal DogHaus restaurant (records plus comics plus games plus audio gear in one unusual hybrid space), and Plain & Fancy Antique Mall in Grand Cities Mall is a 5,000+ square foot multi-vendor antique mall with vinyl among its booth offerings.
Do North Dakota record stores participate in Record Store Day?
Yes, North Dakota’s flagship indie shops are full Record Store Day participants. Orange Records in Fargo runs the most-anticipated Red River Valley RSD event drawing collectors from both Fargo and across to Moorhead Minnesota, Budget Music & Video in Minot anchors the western ND scene with its 49-year institutional draw, and Budget Music in Grand Forks runs an event for the UND college market. Bismarck’s Rhythm Records Music Cafe and Mandan’s Rare Bird Records add Missouri River-corridor RSD presence. RSD Saturday falls in mid-April each year with lines often forming well before the standard 8 AM opening.