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Author Message
25 new of 247 responses total.
lumen
response 120 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 20:21 UTC 1999

blech!  $18 for a CD?  What a ripoff, especially if it's standard 
length..
orinoco
response 121 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 20:24 UTC 1999

Maybe I'd hit Tower during a sale and not realized it.
mcnally
response 122 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 21:57 UTC 1999

  They often have some sort of sale going on but otaking's correct --
  regular prices on full-price discs are often $17.99, which is ludicrous.

  New titles are generally "on sale" for around $13.99 when they first
  come out, and back-catalog titles range from $11.99 to $15.99 when
  they're not on sale ($7.99 to $11.99 when they are..)

orinoco
response 123 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 28 23:28 UTC 1999

Ah, that's what it was, then.  I was on an expedition to buy the albums that
I wouldn't be able to borrow from my parents anymore, so everything I bought
was a back-catalog title.
krj
response 124 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 05:25 UTC 1999

Mike in resp:117 :: Well, I bought two overpriced CDs at the East Lansing
Tower yesterday, both priced at $16.99.  But these were obscure 
world music titles, from Orchestra Nationale de Barbes and MacUmba.
My recollection is that the East Lansing Tower moved to $17.99 on 
"front-line" discs at about the same time that Ann Arbor did.
otaking
response 125 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 16:52 UTC 1999

Even BMG hasn't begun to charge $18 for CDs. Then again, you have to pay S&H
through them.
omni
response 126 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 18:49 UTC 1999

  But if you only catch the sales, you can save money.
mcnally
response 127 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 19:29 UTC 1999

  that's assuming you like their selection, don't mind waiting for the
  sales, etc., basically just to pay a less-unreasonable-than-normal price..

  of course you also have to worry about whether the artist (presumably
  the only other party to the transaction that you care about) is making
  any money off the record-club sale or whether they're actually being
  *charged* for it by the record company as some sort of "promotional expense"
otaking
response 128 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 20:04 UTC 1999

The problem with BMG is their relative lack of selection. I find a lot of
mainstream stuff that I don't mind picking up, but most of the stuff I like
isn't available since they only carry major labels. In some cases, like Kate
Bush, you're lucky if they carry a couple of albums beyond a greatest hits
CD. If only there was a CD club that sold a lot of world, techno, goth,
industrial, ambient...
lumen
response 129 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 22:28 UTC 1999

no kidding.  But unfortunately, that still seems to be somewhat of a 
cult market, or an audience that is significantly smaller than the 
mainstream.

Hey, has anyone considered buying wholesale?  I subscribe to _Sound and 
Vision_ and I keep seeing ads for a wholesale company that is *not* BMG 
or Columbia House.

the only other way to find something like that is to start your own CD 
club, somehow.. you'd have to be an entrepeneur, then..
scott
response 130 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 29 23:37 UTC 1999

$17.99 CDs?  Gee, I guess the industry must really want MP3's to succeed. ;)
mcnally
response 131 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 30 00:13 UTC 1999

  No kidding..  As far as I can tell the industry is doing everything it
  can to alienate music buyers -- dropping any older artists who aren't
  superstars, spending very little money and effort on developing new
  artists and new sounds, gouging every last penny they can, etc..
  (but then you've all heard me bitch about these things before..)
dbratman
response 132 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 30 22:16 UTC 1999

What, if anything, has taken the place of the 45 rpm single of the vinyl 
era?  I see things called "CD singles" for sale, but they're far too 
expensive, both in absolute terms and as a percentage of the cost of a 
full-length CD, for me to imagine buying a fistful casually the way kids 
used to buy 45s in my day.

Or is my sense of price off, and CD singles really do move as fast and 
casually as 45s used to?
orinoco
response 133 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 30 22:21 UTC 1999

Many of the ridiculously-priced CD singles you see have more music on them
than a 45 single.  The usual routine seems to be one or two album tracks, and
a few 'not available anywhere else' B-sides.  
mcnally
response 134 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 30 22:52 UTC 1999

  Yeah, there're basically two kinds of "CD singles" -- 
  
    kind A, which sells for $5.99 - $7.99 usually has a popular song
    and several other tracks, possibly "bonus remixes" or otherwise
    unreleased songs.

    kind B, which is far less common, sells for $2.99 or $3.99 and
    usually has a huge hit song plus one B-side, just like the 45rpm
    singles used to..

  Neither kind really replaces the old 45rpm single, though..  
  Many artists don't release singles at all and of those who do, the
  singles usually come out substantially after the album release,
  sometimes not until well after the song has faded from the hit parade..
  On the whole, record companies would much rather sell you a whole
  album's worth of songs..

  Perhaps "singles" will come back in the era of downloadable digital
  music.  One of the factors working against them at the moment is that
  it costs just as much to produce a CD-single as it does to produce a
  full-length CD (more, actually, on a per-disc basis, since you'll sell
  far fewer of them but still have to pay for packaging, design, etc..)
lumen
response 135 of 247: Mark Unseen   Sep 30 23:57 UTC 1999

resp:134  As long as DJs are in demand, especially in making these 
bonus mixes, I really don't see the demise of the CD single coming 
quickly.
eeyore
response 136 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 02:26 UTC 1999

Actually, I adore the singles. :)

When I was up in Toronto, the price of cd's was incredible....a basic cd would
be $15....Canadian.  Tower had Sarah McLachlan's Mirrorball on sale for
$10.99...canadian.  I saw others on sale for @8.99 or $9.99.....and since I
bought 100 Canadian dollars for only 74 American.....man oh man were the
prices nice!!!!  :)
otaking
response 137 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 02:42 UTC 1999

I need to shop in Canada more often. A collection of Shania Twain videos sells
for CAN$8. Tower charges US$10.

Imagine what used CDs would cost in Windsor...
orinoco
response 138 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 03:37 UTC 1999

<drools>  All the more reason my friend Eric needs to go to Montreal and let
me visit him there. :)
mcnally
response 139 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 04:18 UTC 1999

  Wow!  Record prices have come down since the last time I shopped in
  Canada.  Prices were CDN$18-20 per disc at that time and the Canadian
  dollar was doing significantly better against the American dollar.
otaking
response 140 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 16:15 UTC 1999

Even if CDs were CDN$18, it would still be cheaper than the US$18 that Tower
charges. Sure, you still have to consider the extra GST & PST, but it would
still be worth it in the long run.
eeyore
response 141 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 18:20 UTC 1999

Plus, if you have the patience to wait in line at the border, you can get the
GST back. :)
otaking
response 142 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 19:53 UTC 1999

That's true. You better make sure to save all of your receipts and ensure that
they all have the date and location of where you bought the stuff. You have
to prove that you bought it in Canada.
orinoco
response 143 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 7 20:40 UTC 1999

We do that every year on the way back from Canada, but that's because if
you're living there for three weeks the expenses add up.  The GST saving on
a few CDs would almost not be worth the effort.
otaking
response 144 of 247: Mark Unseen   Oct 8 03:26 UTC 1999

Yeah, but if I made the trip, I'd want it to be worthwhile, considering the
cost of the drive and border crossings. I'd buy a whole stack of CDs or books.
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