Probe Records

Creative Tourist
Probe Records record shop in Liverpool
Matt Harrop

You wouldn’t think it from the un-ironically retro signage that greets you at the door, or from the symmetrically flanked shelves of LPs, or from the quietly furtive discussions of perusing customers, but Probe Records is nothing short of a living legend in the Liverpool music scene.

For more than forty years this independent record shop has stocked an uncompromising selection of LPs, nurtured emerging talent via its own label, and provided a hangout for vinyl addicts (or “Probies” as they became known) and musicians alike. Now in its fourth location at the Bluecoat, Probe may no longer lay claim to being the “control room of Liverpool’s music scene” but it’s still the city’s favourite record shop.

The shop was founded in 1971 by Geoff Davies, a former-carpet manufacturer who was fed up with not having anywhere to buy the kinds of records he liked. Quitting his job and pooling his £300 savings, Davies opened the first Probe Records shop on Clarence Street; he crammed the tiny store with jazz, folk and rock ‘n’ roll releases, as well as lesser-known Jamaican imports and underground magazines. Due to its substantial stock of LPs and leftie literature (including the odd book on marijuana), Probe became a favourite within Liverpool’s alternative movement and soon opened a second shop under the “hippy market store,” Silly Billy’s. When the free love ran out, Probe relocated to Whitechapel Street and found itself opposite Eric’s Club, the unofficial epicentre of the 1970s punk scene. The shop became a regular pre-gig haunt for music fans as well as musicians; members of Frankie Goes To Hollywood, Echo and the Bunnymen and The Teardrop Explodes are all said to have shopped at Probe and Pete Burns even did a stint as a shop assistant.

Thanks to Probe’s cult popularity and its expanding wholesale business, Davies (a man who maintains he was always more of a music enthusiast than a businessman) was able to set up the Probe Plus record label. With the help of John Peel, the label had a number of successful signings during the 1980s, most famously Birkenhead post-punk band, Half Man Half Biscuit. By the 1990s, Probe had moved again, this time to Slater Street, neatly coinciding with the city’s burgeoning post-acid house scene. Its proximity to the Cream nightclub and the increased demand for 12” singles allowed Probe to reign there until 2010, when it moved to the slightly more cerebral surrounds of Georgian-school-turned-arts-centre, the Bluecoat.

But the Bluecoat is no retirement home and today’s Probe Records continues Davies’ quest to stock the best underground records. Releases by the newest buzz bands sit alongside covetable first issues, as well as CDs, second hand offerings and a selection of local street press magazines. And if you don’t know your Nick Cave from your Nick Drake, this is the place to come – some of the assistants have more than 25 years of record-selling experience (and infinitely longer record-buying ones) and are usually happy to offer a play-before-you-buy service. Thanks to a resurgence of interest in vinyl collecting and, of course, being extremely good at what they do, Probe has seen off the rise of digital downloads and the collapse of many fellow independents – and that’s just as impressive as its illustrious back history.

1, The Bluecoat, School LaneLiverpoolL1 3BX View map
Visit Now

Opening Hours

  • Monday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Tuesday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Wednesday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Thursday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Friday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Saturday9:30am - 6:00pm
  • Sunday12:30pm - 5:00pm

Always double check opening hours with the venue before making a special visit.

What's on near Probe Records

An image captured from overhead of two men embracing. One is seated, and the other is kneeling.
Until
ExhibitionsLiverpool
On the other side at FACT

‘On the other side’ at FACT presents the work of three artists, thoroughly examining themes of authority, power and control.

free entry
Until
ActivityLiverpool
Old Dock Tours, Liverpool

The Old Dock tour is a treat for younger and older visitors alike, fans of Liverpool’s maritime past, and anybody curious about local history.

£8.50 with concessions

Where to go near Probe Records

City Centre
Gallery
Bluecoat

Once a school, it’s now one of the city’s liveliest arts hubs, an art gallery showing work by major inter/ national artists that also stages regular performances, readings and more.

Photo of the shop's front window
City Centre
Shop
Bluecoat Display Centre

The Bluecoat Display Centre in Liverpool is a contemporary craft shop – and it’s been doing its thing for over 50 years – despite funding cuts and recessions.

Mamasan Liverpool
City Centre
Mamasan Liverpool

Mamasan is a new three-floor South East Asian inspired restaurant and bar based in Liverpool One. It also has exciting cook-at-home options.

City Centre
Theatre
Epstein Theatre

The Epstein Theatre in Liverpool, formerly known as the Neptune Theatre, was renamed in honour of The Beatles’ Manager Brian Epstein.

Liverpool
Restaurant
Bacino

Bacino pizza and cicchetti bring a slice of Naples cuisine to Liverpool. With tasty dishes and lots of drinks options.

Culture Guides

Festival-goers at Green Island
Music in Manchester and the North

Gazing longingly towards the good times that will accompany the surely imminent sun, we take a look at the best music festivals coming up in Manchester and Salford.