HMV reopening raises revival hopes for London’s Oxford Street
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BRITISH music retailer HMV returns to the iconic site of its former flagship store in central London on Friday, in a much-needed boost to the flagging fortunes of the capital’s premier shopping street.
The re-opening of the historic shop comes as authorities fight back against a wave of so-called American candy stores which have plagued central London since the pandemic.
Steeped in musical history, the one-time HMV store at 363 Oxford Street was opened in 1921 by English composer Edward Elgar and later helped propel The Beatles to fame.
But in recent years, the capital’s main shopping thoroughfare has struggled as big department stores such as Debenhams and House of Fraser shut.
“It feels like Times Square in New York, heavy on quantity but low on quality,” unimpressed US tourist Brandy Fons, 51, told AFP.
Fons, a film publicist on a visit to London with her teenage daughter Sienna, said they had been struck by the amount of rubbish constantly needing to be cleared up.
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“We’ve been to better, a lot better,” she said, adding that she would love to see some local boutiques instead of just big international brands such as Disney.
After HMV Oxford Street closed in 2019, it was converted into one of the many unwanted sweet stores that popped up during the pandemic when only food shops were allowed to stay open.
Local authorities say that at its peak, there were 30 candy or souvenir shops on Oxford Street, traditionally home to big, prestigious retailers.