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Grex > Music2 > #154: Schoolkids II, and Music Retailing |  |
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| 14 new of 247 responses total. |
dbratman
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response 234 of 247:
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Nov 24 18:36 UTC 2000 |
Ken - if this isn't too obvious, what you need is to consult a copy of
the Schwann Opus catalog. There's nothing like a print catalog for
certain types of browsing. I buy a new one every couple of years. I
don't have it here at home, so I can't look up Szymanowski for you
right now, but under each composer, general song recitals are listed
under "Songs" with a list of the songs included (a feature Schwann
didn't used to have), while song cycles assembled by the composer are
under title.
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krj
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response 235 of 247:
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Nov 24 20:44 UTC 2000 |
Thanks for the suggestion, David! We hadn't thought of it. Is the Schwann
stuff still being published on paper? I'd thought I'd read they were
moving online -- but even in an online format they might offer what
Leslie needs in detailed classical browsing.
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dbratman
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response 236 of 247:
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Nov 30 23:11 UTC 2000 |
Ken - Schwann is not online (though they have an informational web
page). The classical catalog, which is now called "Schwann Opus", is a
1000-page behemoth released quarterly, a far cry from the smaller and
less informative monthly of yore. It gives album titles (e.g. "Live at
Carnegie Hall"), detailed lists of contents, (frequently) dates of
recording, etc etc.
I have my catalog to hand now, so I can tell you that there's one
Szymanowski song collection in the Spring '00 issue. The singer(s)
isn't listed, which is unusual, but the album is titled "Songs with
Orchestra"; it includes "Love Songs of Hafiz", "Songs of the Infatuated
Muezzin", "Songs of a Fairy-Tale Princess", "Roxana's Song",
and "Songas after Kasprowicz", and it's Naxos 8553688. There's also a
recording of "Muezzin" paired with Felicien David's "Le Desert", sung
by G. Ottenthal (soprano), on Capriccio 10379.
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anderyn
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response 237 of 247:
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Dec 1 12:15 UTC 2000 |
Wow. Weird stuff at Borders last night!
I went in to the music section at the downtown Ann Arbor Borders just to poke
around, not really planning on buying anything. But... wow. Several copies
of Bedlam Born (Steeleye Span's newest) at *gulp* $13.99. Two copies of John
Tams' Unity at ditto. Several copies of Gabriel's OVO (23.99). Maddy Prior's
Ravenchild. ... Quite a lot of things that I had not thought would be
available Stateside, actually. So I got Bedlam Born.
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krj
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response 238 of 247:
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Dec 2 23:00 UTC 2000 |
Heh. If I had known Park Records was going to end their policy of
putting CDs into the US market about one year after their release in
Britain, I wouldn't have ordered BEDLAM BORN as an import. Sounds like
Borders got a large shipment from the UK, I will have to find time to
go paw over it.
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sspan
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response 239 of 247:
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Dec 3 20:53 UTC 2000 |
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krj
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response 240 of 247:
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Dec 6 22:01 UTC 2000 |
Mickey, would you write something for us about half.com?
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micklpkl
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response 241 of 247:
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Dec 7 00:56 UTC 2000 |
Sure, Ken --- I'd love to do so. <grin>
I found out about half.com when I was on vacation, back in September. I
thought I'd take a look at their selection, and IIRC, I didn't find much that
interested me at first. The site did offer a wish list function, and I took
advantage of that and promptly forgot all about it. Imagine my surprise, when
I arrived home from vacation, I found a notification that a used copy of
"Rhodes I" by Happy Rhodes had become available for purchase. The total with
shipping was just a smidge over $9 --- and better yet, was described as being
in Like new condition, still-sealed. I was ecstatic, having seen the same disc
in worse condition sell for upwards of $70 over on ebay.com. It was very
simple to purchase with a credit card. Unlike it's sister website, half.com
handles all the purchasing details, and it's not necessary for the buyer and
seller to contact one another.
So far, the listings are for CDs, books, DVDs/movies, and console-type games.
I have been selling quite a few items, also. It's a much less painful process
than eBay, for your average run-of-the-mill product. I still reserve rarities
for eBay, because the ROI tends to be higher.
Check it out, if you're in the mood for a good browse through a used
CD/bookstore, but don't want to leave your computer. Caveat emptor! Check the
descriptions carefully, as well as the rating system that sellers are
*required* to honour. Also, check the seller's feedback rating and watch for
things like over-rating, slow shipping (seller's should ship w/in 24hrs of
confirmation), or dead-beat sellers.
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krj
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response 242 of 247:
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Dec 7 20:44 UTC 2000 |
Ooooh, a wish list function. I've been thinking obsessively about
Jungr & Parker's album CANADA, out of print, alas....
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krj
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response 243 of 247:
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Jan 7 23:26 UTC 2001 |
I started item:music,291 to discuss the winding-up of the SKR stores
on Liberty St., so it could be linked to other conferences.
I'll probably try to keep other discussion about music retail here.
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krj
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response 244 of 247:
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Feb 4 01:15 UTC 2001 |
Another CD shop obituary... I hopped over to Windsor today and found
that Dr. Disc will be closing on February 11. The sign in the window
invited customers to stop in and pay their respects; viewing hours
end at 6 pm. My visit was cut drastically short; I had planned
on the store having its usual late evening hours.
Dr. Disc was part of a southern Ontario chain of indie-oriented stores,
and I didn't ask if the whole chain was going out of business, or
just the Windsor store. I'd only been there a few times over the years;
their folk stocks were always disappointing, but they did carry a
lot of Canadian rock bands which I might have heard on the CBC-FM
late night shows. Today, the stock has already been well
picked over -- the store was about half empty -- and the sale discounts
weren't too deep, so I wouldn't recommend a trip there for anything
except sentimental reasons.
Perhaps the relatively new (?) HMV store in the Devonshire Mall
pushed Dr. Disc over the edge; the HMV store had a lot of goodies
in it.
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krj
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response 245 of 247:
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Feb 4 21:47 UTC 2001 |
((( Due to a disk space crunch in the /bbs partition, cfadm has moved
late 1990s Agoras to a different partition. For reasons I don't
fully understand, this may eventually cause problems with items
linked from those Agoras when they are moved back to /bbs at some
future date.
This item is linked from a 1998 Agora. It seemed safest just
to cut off discussion here and start a new item on the topic.
I don't think there are any other active music conference items
with similar links; let me know if you think I missed any. )))
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i
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response 246 of 247:
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Jul 15 21:22 UTC 2001 |
Stuff's been moved back - this item should be safe to discuss in again.
(Doesn't look like anything got lost; let me know if you notice anything.)
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krj
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response 247 of 247:
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Jul 16 17:39 UTC 2001 |
Looks fine. But current discussion on music retail issues has moved
on to item:music,293 and it might as well continue there.
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