ZombieKitten said: haven't bought one in years but I am a MUM
You get ME to buy CDs for you. | |
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sextonseven said: ZombieKitten said: haven't bought one in years but I am a MUM
You get ME to buy CDs for you. true, you bought me a certain 3-CD set last year | |
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ZombieKitten said: sextonseven said: You get ME to buy CDs for you. true, you bought me a certain 3-CD set last year Didn't I buy CDs for you from Amazon too? That may have been years ago. | |
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Can anyone tell me where you buy your cd's?
Best Buy Target Wal-Mart Starbucks ????? | |
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sextonseven said: ZombieKitten said: true, you bought me a certain 3-CD set last year Didn't I buy CDs for you from Amazon too? That may have been years ago. yup, that WAS years ago that was the last couple of CDs I actully properly bought | |
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tricky2 said: Can anyone tell me where you buy your cd's?
Best Buy Target Wal-Mart Starbucks ????? Three places mostly: major label releases - Best Buy indie releases - Other Music anything else I can't find - online | |
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Yep, I still buy CDs too, although not new releases unless it's by my favorite artists or re-issues (like the Complete Chi-Lites on Brunswick Records Vol's 1 & 2 I got last year). Mostly all new releases are on Spotify, so when I buy CDs it's usually by artists or the albums not on Spotify. | |
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I buy all of my CDs from Amazon.com. You can get some stuff dirt cheap and still sealed. "Keep in mind that I'm an artist...and I'm sensitive about my shit."--E. Badu | |
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I buy most of my CDs at Borders Books b/c I get coupons emailed to me frequently.
For example, they just sent me a 25% off coupon for any one item in the store. I can go online and reserve a copy at my local store and pick it up at lunchtime. Tomorrow I'm heading out to buy the new Sade CD. By St. Boogar and all the saints at the backside door of Purgatory! | |
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Universal Betting on Lower Prices to Boost CD Sales
NEW YORK (Billboard) – Universal Music Group (UMG) is embarking on one of the most ambitious efforts yet to boost U.S. CD sales, with the test of a new pricing structure designed to sell most new releases by current artists at $10 or less at retail. The major's "Velocity" pricing program responds to the continuing plunge in CD sales, taking aim at brick-and-mortar retail stores that have scaled back on floor space dedicated to music. The pricing adjustments will also bring CD prices more in line with what consumers pay for digital albums at online retailers like iTunes and Amazon. "We think it will really bring new life into the physical format," Universal Music Group Distribution chairman/CEO Jim Urie says. Universal, which accounts for 28.7 percent of year-to-date U.S. album sales, according to Nielsen SoundScan, will cut UMG's main wholesale price point of $10.35 to about $7.50 or less for front-line releases, which are generally by established current artists. It's also breaking with prevailing industry practice by putting suggested retail prices on CDs, ranging from $6 to $10. UMG is betting that it can offset the loss in revenue per CD with increased sales volume and the rollout of greater numbers of higher-priced, higher-margin deluxe editions of albums. The new CD pricing structure could also spur UMG imprints to find ways to reduce CD costs, such as embracing less elaborate packaging on standard single CD releases or placing fewer songs on albums in order to reduce mechanical royalty payments to songwriters. Most new releases will carry the new price points, although there will be the occasional exception, UMG sources say. The Velocity program will begin in the second quarter and run through most of the year. Sources say the first titles to be released under Velocity are expected to include new albums by Godsmack, Game and Taio Cruz. RETAIL REACTION Retailers should respond well to the new price points, given that many of them were already pricing many new releases at $10 and absorbing the loss to generate foot traffic to their stores. But their enthusiasm may be tempered by the narrower profit margins expected under the new pricing structure. According to sources, front-line UMG releases will carry a 25 percent profit margin, down sharply from the customary 35 percent. That means CDs with a suggested list price of $10 would wholesale for $7.50, those with a $9 list for $6.75 and so on. The move may not go over well with retailers that buy from wholesalers and already reap a narrower margin than those that buy direct from labels. And merchants accustomed to having free rein in setting retail prices may chafe at the suggested list prices. Meanwhile, UMG artists and their managers may grumble about the pricing initiative, since royalty payments, usually a percentage of sales, will be calculated based on the lower price points. "We are happy to see that a major music vendor has made a decision to lower its price substantially," Bob Higgins, chairman/CEO of retail operator Trans World Entertainment, says, "because it's what the customer wants today, and (because lower pricing is needed) if we are going to see a viable CD business continue." Similarly, Newbury Comics CEO Mike Dreese says he gives the initiative "two thumbs up," but adds that the industry still needs the other major labels and independents to make similar reductions in front-line pricing to boost overall CD sales. Merchants have long clamored that lower pricing alone would prolong the life of the CD, sales of which are down 15.4 percent in the United States so far this year from the same period in 2009, according to SoundScan. With retail Sunday circulars and the home page of Apple's iTunes store touting hit titles at $9.99, it became conventional wisdom among merchants that $10 was the magic price point that would induce consumers to buy more CDs. UMG was the first major to cut wholesale CD prices when it initiated its JumpStart pricing program in 2003. The other majors initially condemned the move, but eventually began reducing prices on their own catalog titles. Such initiatives have brought wholesale prices down to the $6-$8 range for midline and full-priced titles. Front-line pricing, however, remains a mixed bag, with UMG's main wholesale price point at $10.35, Sony's at $10.50, EMI's at $12.04, and Warner Music Group's at $12.05. Last year, Trans World enlisted the participation of UMG, Sony and EMI in a pricing experiment to sell every CD for $9.99, an initiative that it has extended to more than 100 of its stores. "Things are not going to get better for CD sales unless the price point is addressed," a senior retail executive says. "One thing that the Trans World test shows for sure: $10 will drive sales and traffic." | |
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Yes,I do download sometimes but very rarely. I prefer to have the actual cd in my hands,theirs just something exciting about it for me. "All that glitters ain't gold" | |
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DakutiusMaximus said: Universal Betting on Lower Prices to Boost CD Sales
NEW YORK (Billboard) – Universal Music Group (UMG) is embarking on one of the most ambitious efforts yet to boost U.S. CD sales, with the test of a new pricing structure designed to sell most new releases by current artists at $10 or less at retail. The major's "Velocity" pricing program responds to the continuing plunge in CD sales, taking aim at brick-and-mortar retail stores that have scaled back on floor space dedicated to music. The pricing adjustments will also bring CD prices more in line with what consumers pay for digital albums at online retailers like iTunes and Amazon. "We think it will really bring new life into the physical format," Universal Music Group Distribution chairman/CEO Jim Urie says. Universal, which accounts for 28.7 percent of year-to-date U.S. album sales, according to Nielsen SoundScan, will cut UMG's main wholesale price point of $10.35 to about $7.50 or less for front-line releases, which are generally by established current artists. It's also breaking with prevailing industry practice by putting suggested retail prices on CDs, ranging from $6 to $10. UMG is betting that it can offset the loss in revenue per CD with increased sales volume and the rollout of greater numbers of higher-priced, higher-margin deluxe editions of albums. The new CD pricing structure could also spur UMG imprints to find ways to reduce CD costs, such as embracing less elaborate packaging on standard single CD releases or placing fewer songs on albums in order to reduce mechanical royalty payments to songwriters. Most new releases will carry the new price points, although there will be the occasional exception, UMG sources say. The Velocity program will begin in the second quarter and run through most of the year. Sources say the first titles to be released under Velocity are expected to include new albums by Godsmack, Game and Taio Cruz. RETAIL REACTION Retailers should respond well to the new price points, given that many of them were already pricing many new releases at $10 and absorbing the loss to generate foot traffic to their stores. But their enthusiasm may be tempered by the narrower profit margins expected under the new pricing structure. According to sources, front-line UMG releases will carry a 25 percent profit margin, down sharply from the customary 35 percent. That means CDs with a suggested list price of $10 would wholesale for $7.50, those with a $9 list for $6.75 and so on. The move may not go over well with retailers that buy from wholesalers and already reap a narrower margin than those that buy direct from labels. And merchants accustomed to having free rein in setting retail prices may chafe at the suggested list prices. Meanwhile, UMG artists and their managers may grumble about the pricing initiative, since royalty payments, usually a percentage of sales, will be calculated based on the lower price points. "We are happy to see that a major music vendor has made a decision to lower its price substantially," Bob Higgins, chairman/CEO of retail operator Trans World Entertainment, says, "because it's what the customer wants today, and (because lower pricing is needed) if we are going to see a viable CD business continue." Similarly, Newbury Comics CEO Mike Dreese says he gives the initiative "two thumbs up," but adds that the industry still needs the other major labels and independents to make similar reductions in front-line pricing to boost overall CD sales. Merchants have long clamored that lower pricing alone would prolong the life of the CD, sales of which are down 15.4 percent in the United States so far this year from the same period in 2009, according to SoundScan. With retail Sunday circulars and the home page of Apple's iTunes store touting hit titles at $9.99, it became conventional wisdom among merchants that $10 was the magic price point that would induce consumers to buy more CDs. UMG was the first major to cut wholesale CD prices when it initiated its JumpStart pricing program in 2003. The other majors initially condemned the move, but eventually began reducing prices on their own catalog titles. Such initiatives have brought wholesale prices down to the $6-$8 range for midline and full-priced titles. Front-line pricing, however, remains a mixed bag, with UMG's main wholesale price point at $10.35, Sony's at $10.50, EMI's at $12.04, and Warner Music Group's at $12.05. Last year, Trans World enlisted the participation of UMG, Sony and EMI in a pricing experiment to sell every CD for $9.99, an initiative that it has extended to more than 100 of its stores. "Things are not going to get better for CD sales unless the price point is addressed," a senior retail executive says. "One thing that the Trans World test shows for sure: $10 will drive sales and traffic." Well cd sales are not going to get better period. Technology has gone to far forward and music will suffer the most with it than any other form of entertainment. The lowering of Prices wont do shit, just look at the past, labels will not budge on the front line pricing, the crap that happend 2003 i was part of and it was a HUGE SCAM, universal cut "midline" prices and dropped the list price of new cds $2, meaning they wanted STORES to take the hir for that $2 drop they took no hit for it, they held firm on the frontline pricing, so U DO THE MATH if a label charges 11-13$ for a new cd wholesale and you, to be competitive sell that for $10 u are already a few dollars in the whole on every cd, then factor in your employees wages, rent for your store, electric and facility payments WHICH ALL HAVE GONE up especially for NYC area stores, its just a doomed experiment with retailers being lost, which is why you had a few of the music retailers go under totally, and the extinction of the music store. As for the mom and pops, this really means nothing to them unless the labels drop the front line wholesale price, they can not sell a new cd for 9.99 at all, a mom and pop cant take a $4 hit on every cd in this day and age.The mom and pops will survive on used sales and rare and imports etc.. "We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F | |
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