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7 new of 106 responses total.
goose
response 100 of 106: Mark Unseen   Oct 16 00:11 UTC 2003

same goes for Throbbing Gristle
krj
response 101 of 106: Mark Unseen   Oct 29 21:30 UTC 2003

Detroit retailer Harmony House, which almost closed a year or so ago and
then revived with just its classical store and its flagship store both
on Woodward, appears done.   I have a web chat board rumor that what
is left of the operation has been sold to somebody called Trans World.
 
In Google's cache, I found the Harmony House web page from Sept 27
which announces the Classical store is closing, giving no details.
The Harmony House web page isn't responding any more.
 
As I mentioned when HH first started to liquidate: the classical 
CD shop in Royal Oak was world class, a really good resource.
I regret a little that we never visited it during its one year 
reprieve.
dbratman
response 102 of 106: Mark Unseen   Oct 30 17:54 UTC 2003

I was never at this Royal Oak store, but I've only seen one really 
world-class classical CD shop in the entire history of classical CDs, 
i.e. one which measured up to the best LP stores in the LP era.  It's 
Classical Millennium in Portland, Oregon, and it was still alive and 
thriving when I last visited, a year ago.
trustnon
response 103 of 106: Mark Unseen   May 22 17:56 UTC 2004

I've pretty much given up on buying cd's now, most of the money goes to the
RIAA, so i just buy vinyl now, i've found it to be relatively cheaper than
cd's and u get better quality, now i have a large collection of vinyl, the
best part about it is that ure alloud to remix it as a dj.
krj
response 104 of 106: Mark Unseen   Nov 23 05:45 UTC 2004

The Borders store in downtown Ann Arbor just whacked the square-footage
devoted to CD by maybe 30-40%.  Classical music got chopped by about
50%; the classical music room is now shared with jazz and a few 
other things.
 
The stock was not pruned by that amount, as the shelving has been
replaced with new racks which store CDs all the way down to the 
floor.  This may use space more efficiently, but it means 
that browsers have to drop down to their knees a lot.  Some of 
us are getting to an age where we don't really want to do that
just for shopping fun.
 
My initial reaction is that the CD area is a really unpleasant 
space to be in now; I expect the time I 
spend in idle CD browsing at Borders to cut way back.   

But then, Borders and I have been falling out for a while.
Borders has been doing an increasingly poor job of stocking 
the CDs I want, even when they are USA-distributed discs on 
labels that Borders has historically stocked, and as a result
very little of my CD spending goes into Ann Arbor shops any more.
I think everything I have bought in the last three months came
from Internet mail order, or from a trip to Tower Records in 
Manhattan.

In party, Richard reminded me that this was roughly what Virgin
Megastores did when they axed the classical room and cut the 
world music section to expand DVD space.  

((There's another piece to be written about the impending death 
of the USA world music scene, but that's for another item.))

tpryan
response 105 of 106: Mark Unseen   Nov 28 18:25 UTC 2004

        I fell out of Borders a long time ago.
krj
response 106 of 106: Mark Unseen   Jan 12 03:10 UTC 2005

Underground Sounds, the small CD shop on Liberty in Ann Arbor, 
has moved above ground.  I haven't checked their stock in about 
18 months; they seemed to be aiming for a younger customer than me.
Still, this is the first sign of growth in downtown CD retailing
in quite a few years.

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