Throughout the Pomona Swap Meet’s sea of shiny Corvettes and Nineteen Fifties Cadillacs, a storage truck appears misplaced. In thick block letters, it reads Thump Information and is open for merchandising. As racks of graphic tees line either side of the truck, the L.A.-based file label fills its cabinets with lowrider mixtape CDs, Latin oldies USB flash drives and uncommon vinyl field units — a bodily media paradise. Although the Thump truck won’t meet a traditional automotive present’s necessities, its contents undoubtedly do.
“People think that we shut down and went home, but we’re still here. We might not be as strong, but we’re still around,” stated DJ Steve “Boom Boom” Hernandez, the self-proclaimed face of Thump Information. “It’s always a big shock when people realize we’re not only still existing, but we’re everywhere.”
Based in 1990 by Invoice Walker, Thump Information focuses on distributing oldies mixtapes like “Old School Collection,” the “East Side Story” collection, “Latin Oldies” and “Lowrider Oldies.” Crafting totally different mixes for numerous L.A. listeners, like “The Best of El Chicano” or “East Side Classic,” Thump prioritizes classic sounds which are sometimes arduous to come back by within the age of streaming. With the assistance of nostalgia chasers and others wanting to maintain the tradition alive, the label is celebrating its thirty fifth anniversary in 2025.
Thump Information is a small L.A.-based file label that travels to totally different occasions promoting old-school music CDS and flash drives loaded with music to clients from a truck.
(Jill Connelly / For De Los)
At the moment, they concentrate on promoting their anthologies with their three vehicles — which tackle numerous Southern California swap meets, automotive exhibits, file gala’s and even mall parking heaps each weekend — and representing new, up-and-coming artists who embody Thump.
These days, oldies tradition has change into an umbrella time period for a sure form of nostalgia. Whether or not it’s blasting Etta James, Battle and Malo whereas cruising town or attending oldies celebrations like Night time of the Blaxican, paying tribute to the sounds and fashions of the previous lives on. In sustaining and innovating the scene, Thump Information’ survival is a testomony to those thriving communities.
Simply as millennials introduced again the vinyl file, Gen Z has revitalized curiosity within the CD. Whether or not it’s the CD’s shiny, iridescent look or the intimate liner notes tucked into each jewel case, the compact disc maintains a sure attraction amongst younger music consumers and collectors.
Jacob Mora, 11, who was looking the truck’s choice, has spent the previous month saving up for a CD participant. He says listening to oldies reminds him of spending time together with his dad and that his favourite Thump Information mixtape is “Old School Vol. 2.”
“I just like the old style of everything. I love looking at all covers of the different records and CDs,” stated Mora. “It’s cool. I just like the different type of music that used to be around back then.”
He stands in entrance of the Thump truck for a strong quarter-hour going over every CD that pursuits him and the various tracklists. He’s at all times looking out for something that has singer Debbie Deb of “When I Hear Music” ’80s fame.
Henry Ramos dances exterior the Thump Information Truck at a pop-up live performance occasion at La Puente Park.
(Jill Connelly / For De Los)
Though streaming stays the most well-liked strategy to eat music, Hernandez, who joined the label in 1995, finds that folks will at all times provide you with good excuses to purchase a CD — particularly when it’s one thing they haven’t seen in years.
“People are always like, ‘I lost my CD. I need a new one,’ or ‘My cousins stole my CD.’ There’s always somebody who wants something,” stated Hernandez. “We’re not selling as much as we used to. That’s the truth, but neither is any other label.”
Working in nearly each a part of the corporate, from images to DJing and gross sales, Hernandez shares fond reminiscences of Christmas events with Tierra and capturing covers for Cypress Hill. However over the various years he has devoted to Thump, he says it’s about extra than simply the music; it’s about satisfying the neighborhood.
“Thump Records owns a lot of the rights to the different artists, albums and songs,” stated Hernandez, including that merchandise, resembling T-shirts, additionally may be very widespread. “We try to cater to everyone … whether they’re young little kids with families or older people who are taken back to a different time. It makes me feel like we are doing something good.”
Wrapped in a Mexican flag, rapper Ricky Did Tha, who works with Thump, runs across the truck posting upcoming occasions for the label’s brewery enterprise, Oldies Beer. Frequenting totally different file gala’s and tribute exhibits with the label, he says the rationale Thump continues to be round is due to its dedication to the “oldies lifestyle.”
“When you buy one of these and you really listen to it, you feel it more than just the music. You feel the energy. It’s how we can all come together. It reminds people that we have different pasts, but we are united,” the rapper stated.
“That’s why everyone says, ‘We don’t dance. We boogie.”’