“Bristol has a very particular slant on things”
Community sits at the heart of Friendly Records. Since opening in 2016, the shop has grown from founder Tom Friend’s personal obsession into one of Bristol’s most loved music spaces. It started simply: he had too many records at home and not enough room – but the result has become something much bigger, with Scott Hendy joining Friendly Records in 2023 the shop and label gained another experienced music veteran having worked in Bristol’s Purple Penguin record shop, DJ’d internationally and released records as Boca 45 and been one half of Bristol band Malachai.
Friend’s background in music also runs deep. He worked in the art department at Heavenly Recordings, and then as an A&R man at DB Records, 679 Recordings and Island Records, helping shape careers for acts like Electric Soft Parade, The Polyphonic Spree and Ben Kweller. He’s managed bands, taught students, and opened an art gallery with Geoff Barrow. But the record shop idea was always there, quietly waiting.
Born in Somerset, as a teenager Tom would travel to Bristol to visit record shops – places that felt exciting, intimidating, and full of possibility. Pre-internet, they were everything: discovery, community, culture. It’s that feeling he’s tried to recreate. Friendly isn’t about gatekeeping. It’s about walking in, feeling welcome, and finding something new, whether you know what you’re looking for or not.
Bristol still shapes everything they do. The shop leans into its local scene, with support from artists helping spread the word. It’s not just a shop anymore. It’s a hub. A place where things happen.
And that matters, because running a physical record shop in 2026 isn’t exactly the obvious business success story. Online is easier. Cheaper. But it misses the point. Records are physical – you’re meant to hold them, talk about them, bump into people while flipping through the racks. That’s what independent shops offer. Not just products, but connection. The same goes for indie labels and spaces more broadly: small, yes, but culturally vital.
That community mindset doesn’t stop at the shop door. In 2022, as war broke out in Ukraine, Friend and his team asked, ‘what can we do?’. That question led to a huge fundraising effort for War Child, raising over £250,000. It kicked off with a major Bristol show featuring artists including IDLES and Portishead, and grew into a series of special 7” vinyl releases from the likes of PJ Harvey and Sleaford Mods. Music, turned into action.
And this long-standing commitment to supporting War Child is at the heart of their 10-year anniversary block party. Featuring an eclectic line-up of artists including DJ Krust, IDLES, DJ Format, Andy & Nancy Smith and Claude Cooper, it’s also a fundraising effort. With proceeds from the IDLES charity merch sale, Geoff Barrow’s special raffle and exclusive event merchandise going to War Child.
Bringing together music, community and charity in the heart of Bristol, UNCLE and BUILD HOLLYWOOD have partnered with Friendly Records, gifting flyposting and billboard space to bring their story and the event to the streets of the city.
Friendly Records started as a shop. It’s now something wider. In this interview, Tom Friend talks about how it all came together, and why spaces like this still matter.