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NEW YORK DAWN™ > Blog > Entertainment > San Fernando music store featured in 1992 ‘Wayne’s World’ closes after almost 78 years
San Fernando music store featured in 1992 ‘Wayne’s World’ closes after almost 78 years
Entertainment

San Fernando music store featured in 1992 ‘Wayne’s World’ closes after almost 78 years

Last updated: June 23, 2025 2:58 pm
Editorial Board Published June 23, 2025
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Ed Intagliata leaned his physique towards the money register as he greeted prospects with a heartfelt goodbye hug. After almost 78 years of enterprise, his beloved music store is closing in gentle of his retirement.

All that is still of Cassell’s Music are empty cabinets, scattered containers and unsold devices — a quiet ending for what was as soon as a vigorous hub for music lovers and aspiring musicians.

Eric Knight, 29, reminisced about his childhood years spent inside Cassell’s.

“My dad came in, he bought me a bass and a little amp to go with it and set me up with some lessons back here,” Knight mentioned. “As I got older, I started making some friends that played music and we all got together, drove down here and spent about two hours in that back room, three or four teenagers piled into that tiny room. If we ever did that in Guitar Center, we would be kicked out. But Ed would pop his head in, listen and get back to work. He made everyone feel welcomed and invited.”

Cassell’s in San Fernando has been a beloved fixture inside its neighborhood for many years, with prospects noting proprietor Ed Intagliata’s welcoming presence.

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Instances)

Intagliata, now 71, turned the store’s proprietor after he graduated from Cal State Fullerton with a level in music. On the time, Intagliata labored within the grievance division at Sears.

“The success of the store was on my shoulders as a 24-year-old kid,” Intagliata mentioned. “I made some mistakes, but I grew from it. My father taught me some very savvy business advice, which I’ve governed the store by for 48 years and it’s been a good run. We’ve weathered all the recessions and things like that.”

His father, an aerospace engineer on the time, purchased the shop from its founder, Albert Cassell, in 1978 after seeing an advert for it within the Los Angeles Instances. His father, Intagliata mentioned, employed his siblings to fund their school schooling.

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“My brother Robert was a marketing major at Cal State Northridge. He started implementing a lot of ideas he was learning in his marketing class,” Intagliata mentioned. “And one of the things we did was we donated a guitar and some lessons as a giveaway to somebody at Dodger Stadium at every last Dodgers home game.”

His brother John repaired band devices for about 12 years, Intagliata mentioned. His subsequent brother, Paul, taught trumpet classes to a pupil who finally went on tour with Inexperienced Day. Intagliata mentioned his sister, the child of the household, obtained an engineering diploma from Cal State Northridge and taught piano at Cassell’s for about eight years.

“A lot of students still remember her,” he mentioned. “They come in and ask, ‘What’s your sister doing? I took piano lessons from her 30 years ago.’ ”

Walter Crawley plays the first notes of a new trumpet purchased at Cassell's Music.

“I didn’t realize how deep the impact and influence the store had on people’s lives around here, getting them started on music,” Intagliata mentioned. “Just how it’s kind of a nice place to hang out and be creative with.”

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Instances)

Mornings are available in early for Intagliata, a lot to his dismay. He commutes often from his residence in Santa Clarita to his store, nestled in San Fernando on Maclay Avenue in entrance of a Fosters Freeze, Valley relic. Initially from Connecticut, Intagliata’s household moved to California in 1960, setting root in Palos Verdes — the place his mom nonetheless lives at this time.

“I hated the peacocks,” he mentioned. “They’re a mess.”

Initially situated within the San Fernando Mall, Cassell’s has been round since 1948. The store offered teenage rock star Ritchie Valens his first guitar, a glossy Gibson ES-225 electrical, in 1958.

Cassell's Music

Individuals from around the globe visited Cassell’s after it was featured in “Wayne’s World,” which starred well-known actors equivalent to Mike Myers and Dana Carvey.

(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Instances)

Intagliata’s father put down a down cost and bought the shop’s orignal title for about $5,000 in 1978. Ed Intagliata paid about $173,000 in a span of 5 years, he mentioned. And 6 years after buying it, he moved Cassell’s to its present location on Memorial Day 1984. The placement was an electronics retailer that offered CB radios and TV antennas, Intagliata mentioned.

“I remember in the early to mid-80s, before they moved out to Maclay, they were in the heart of San Fernando Mall and I was in elementary, buying cassettes,” mentioned Rago Mier, 52-year-old San Fernando resident. “It’s just heartbreaking for me that this store is no longer going to be here. I’m gonna miss it.”

Intagliata mentioned Cassell’s was a file retailer at one level. He saved one of many unique plastic sleeves with the store’s brand.

A record from when Cassell's music used to sell vinyls.

At one level, Cassell’s offered data, with one that’s nonetheless saved on the retailer pictured right here.

(Carlin Stiehl/Los Angeles Instances)

“It was one of those things where you can come in, put on your headphones and listen to the latest thing,” he mentioned. “We would put these sleeves on all the LPs.”

Intagliata personalised nearly each nook of his retailer: shopping for luau decor from Social gathering Metropolis to function his assortment of ukuleles, frames of signed celeb headshots and a prized possession: the white 1964 Fender Stratocaster electrical guitar featured within the 1992 movie “Wayne’s World.”

Within the film, Wayne’s character performed by actor Mike Meyers makes repeated visits to the store simply to gaze on the fender guitar. Posters of the tune “No Stairway to Heaven,” are scattered throughout the store. Intagliata mentioned he had no thought how massive the film could be.

“They had a location scout come in one day and he was just asking, ‘Hey, we are looking for a music store to film a movie of a “Saturday Night Live” sketch,’ and I didn’t see him for a lot of months,” Intagliata mentioned. “He came back in again and said they liked my store, and apparently went to like seven or eight states looking for a music store that would fit what they were looking for.”

A "Wayne's World" guitar signed by Mike Myers and Dana Carvey is displayed at Cassell's Music.

On show at Cassell’s Music is a “Wayne’s World” guitar signed by Mike Myers and Dana Carvey, after a scene from the film was filmed on the retailer.

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Instances)

Intagliata mentioned “Wayne’s World” put Cassell’s on the map after movie crews determined to maintain the shop’s title within the film. Guests from all around the world got here to see the guitar on show, one New Zealand fan even asking him for the case dimension to make a reproduction at residence, Intagliata mentioned.

“People come here and feel like the actors can come out any minute,” he mentioned. “It gives them a real sense of excitement.”

The guitar shall be featured in a shrine alongside the automobile utilized in “Wayne’s World” at a father-and-son museum in Canada, Intagliata mentioned.

“I’m just finding out that I didn’t realize how deep the impact and influence the store had on people’s lives around here, getting them started on music,” he mentioned. “Just how it’s kind of a nice place to hang out and be creative with.”

Intagliata not too long ago revived an outdated T-shirt design from 1978 he present in his father’s closet. The shirts offered like hotcakes the identical day the cargo was delivered. All Intagliata has from these days, moreover a couple of shirts and the reminiscences, is the primary guitar he ever offered: an auditorium guitar, hung up in a nook of his retailer.

“I think I’m going to keep it,” he mentioned as he stared at it. “They want me to sell it, but I’m going to keep it.”

Intagliata’s plan is to go to Italy subsequent yr. He has been eyeing the Amalfi Coast after he noticed an image of the Ravello Music Competition stage.

“Isn’t that something?” he mentioned, admiring his laptop display. “I sing in a classical choir up in Santa Clarita. This is my genre, not rock ‘n’ roll. It’s this.”

Intagliata toyed with the concept of retirement a couple of years prior. After efficiently promoting his retailer through a web based itemizing, Intagliata went on Fb to make the announcement.

“I want to be able to travel while I still have relatively good health because I’m getting up there in age. I know I don’t look it,” Intagliata mentioned, jokingly.

Cassell’s Music shall be open till July 21. My Valley Go, a web based customer’s information to the San Fernando Valley, shall be screening “Wayne’s World” at Cassell’s on July 10 beginning at 5:30 p.m. Tickets are $35 per particular person and may be bought on-line.

Joey Loya, 3, an aspiring drummer, looks over a small drum kit at Cassell's Music

Intagliata took over the shop’s possession from his father after graduating school, and searching again on his 48-year tenure, he says, “It’s been a good run.”

(Carlin Stiehl / Los Angeles Instances)

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