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Reply #60 posted 12/17/20 10:08am

JayCrawford

Margot said:



uPtoWnNY said:




vainandy said:



spit I knew somebody was eventually going to say the ever famous "There's good new music but you have to look for it." comment. That's the problem right there, the fact that you have to seek it out and find it but you didn't previously have to. And what are you going to do when you eventually find it? Listen to it alone because nobody else has ever heard of it but yourself? Hell, that's masturbation. lol


.


Hell, that may be all fine and well for straight people because most of them have been married for years when they get older so they've already trapped an old ball and chain at home to give it up to them when they get horny. But a whore like me has to depend on clubs to find somebody to take home and get lucky for the night. It would be a lot more fun if the music was actually good music being played in the clubs rather than bullshit because at least your money wouldn't have been totally wasted if you didn't get lucky that night. At least you would have had a good time musically. And if you do happen to get lucky and take someone home, do you think they are going to like hearing the music that you "searched and found"? Hell naw. They're going to want to hear more of that bullshit that they are used to hearing which makes me tell them..... "Look, hurry up and give me the dick so I can get you the hell out of here as soon as possible because you bore me.". So you see....it's very important that good music should still be in the mainstream. It's damn ridiculous that an old whore like me can still jam like a motherfucker when a younger generation couldn't even keep up with a fucking Lawrence Welk tempo in music. evillol




Yep, back in the day you didn't have to search or go "underground" to hear great music....it was all over the place, on radio and in clubs. In NYC, we had WABC, WBLS, KISS, WKTU, WWRL....great music everywhere.








I think the younger Orgers would say that we 'old fogies' don't know where to look. LOL




They just don't understand, we come from an era where good music was found on the radio, MTV, talk shows even.

They just expect us to waste our time googling everything that's good now
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Reply #61 posted 12/17/20 10:28am

MickyDolenz

avatar

JayCrawford said:

They just don't understand, we come from an era where good music was found on the radio, MTV, talk shows even.

That music was good to you, not to everybody that was around at the same time. I was around some goth kids and some metalheads and both groups tended to say that the music & artists played on Top 40 radio & MTV was sellout music and no good. That's why there were different radio formats. There was "easy listening" for the WWII generation, "R&B" for that audience, "AOR" for hard rock fans, adult contemporary, and so on. Many people only listen to one genre. There's people who only listen to gospel music and no secular music at all. They consider anything that is not gospel "blues", "worldly music", or "devil's music".

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #62 posted 12/17/20 11:00am

lastdecember

avatar

Music now is in a different world than it was. From the way you get it, most dont even have a collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had. Streaming is renting regardless of you thinking you own something now you dont that is the difference and why you really cant compare eras. I mean its like comparing A homerun hitter in baseball to now comparing to Babe Ruth or someone like that, guys train now, back then they tossed the ball, there were no weights and supplements, also no rules of what you could do, I mean in the mid 80's Keith Hernandez of the Mets drank beer in the clubhouse and smoked a cigarette on the bench waiting to go back on the field, today its all different with rules and regiments. With Music it is no different you cant compare eras, but this goes in many things, back in the day it was a big thing if you made a film, because of costs and difficulty now some can make films on their phones, many music videos have been shot on phones. So i cant compare someone working and shooting a film on a digital high tech camera to someone like Coppola who shot on film and the editing was cutting and splicing etc..Now with music and the eras you cant compare because the world is different, when the internet came into play and how to get and make music changed, things changed drastically. But also remember as these times changed so did focus, when music stopped selling and sorry that is a factor, when it became a rental and aritsts really could not make money or very little, they began to go back to just doing singles, because the attention of the listener or in this case the renter doesnt have time for an hour long investment into their product, so you still get good artists songs and whatever but you arent going to get THAT artist with THAT appeal of another era, its just not going to happen. So music means whatever to whomever, its something to you that it isnt to me. Someone can post their top artists right now and I pretty much guarantee that very few us share similar artists at all.


"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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Reply #63 posted 12/17/20 11:50am

JayCrawford

lastdecember said:

Music now is in a different world than it was. From the way you get it, most dont even have a collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had. Streaming is renting regardless of you thinking you own something now you dont that is the difference and why you really cant compare eras. I mean its like comparing A homerun hitter in baseball to now comparing to Babe Ruth or someone like that, guys train now, back then they tossed the ball, there were no weights and supplements, also no rules of what you could do, I mean in the mid 80's Keith Hernandez of the Mets drank beer in the clubhouse and smoked a cigarette on the bench waiting to go back on the field, today its all different with rules and regiments. With Music it is no different you cant compare eras, but this goes in many things, back in the day it was a big thing if you made a film, because of costs and difficulty now some can make films on their phones, many music videos have been shot on phones. So i cant compare someone working and shooting a film on a digital high tech camera to someone like Coppola who shot on film and the editing was cutting and splicing etc..Now with music and the eras you cant compare because the world is different, when the internet came into play and how to get and make music changed, things changed drastically. But also remember as these times changed so did focus, when music stopped selling and sorry that is a factor, when it became a rental and aritsts really could not make money or very little, they began to go back to just doing singles, because the attention of the listener or in this case the renter doesnt have time for an hour long investment into their product, so you still get good artists songs and whatever but you arent going to get THAT artist with THAT appeal of another era, its just not going to happen. So music means whatever to whomever, its something to you that it isnt to me. Someone can post their top artists right now and I pretty much guarantee that very few us share similar artists at all.




Do you think Spotify hurt music?
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Reply #64 posted 12/17/20 12:44pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

Spotify and other services have taken the place of radio for the younger generations. Heck, my son doesn't even download albums anymore and play them. He just listens to whatever random songs pop up on different streaming services on his phone...like I do with radio. A different ball game entirely.

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #65 posted 12/17/20 1:51pm

lastdecember

avatar

JayCrawford said:

lastdecember said:

Music now is in a different world than it was. From the way you get it, most dont even have a collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had. Streaming is renting regardless of you thinking you own something now you dont that is the difference and why you really cant compare eras. I mean its like comparing A homerun hitter in baseball to now comparing to Babe Ruth or someone like that, guys train now, back then they tossed the ball, there were no weights and supplements, also no rules of what you could do, I mean in the mid 80's Keith Hernandez of the Mets drank beer in the clubhouse and smoked a cigarette on the bench waiting to go back on the field, today its all different with rules and regiments. With Music it is no different you cant compare eras, but this goes in many things, back in the day it was a big thing if you made a film, because of costs and difficulty now some can make films on their phones, many music videos have been shot on phones. So i cant compare someone working and shooting a film on a digital high tech camera to someone like Coppola who shot on film and the editing was cutting and splicing etc..Now with music and the eras you cant compare because the world is different, when the internet came into play and how to get and make music changed, things changed drastically. But also remember as these times changed so did focus, when music stopped selling and sorry that is a factor, when it became a rental and aritsts really could not make money or very little, they began to go back to just doing singles, because the attention of the listener or in this case the renter doesnt have time for an hour long investment into their product, so you still get good artists songs and whatever but you arent going to get THAT artist with THAT appeal of another era, its just not going to happen. So music means whatever to whomever, its something to you that it isnt to me. Someone can post their top artists right now and I pretty much guarantee that very few us share similar artists at all.

Do you think Spotify hurt music?


I think streaming overall hurts artists, there are a few benefits because many new artists can link through social media and then hope their listeners will share or they will end up on a playlist sponsored etc....but the pennies they make that's one of the reasons they can on,y do singles especially if they are doing it all on their own, booking shows, promotion, it's tough I mean they really need hundreds of thousands of streams to even make anything, I mean I know many indie artists that I follow and 10k streams they are lucky to get a few hundred bucks if even, now if they were selling a single physical it's more or people were actually buying it not renting it, and also you better be doing the writing and playing because if you have co writes and a band that money you gotta split you are lucky now to get a cup of coffee. Thing is it's only one of the art forms or entertainment whatever that this is acceptable. So I think it's more negative than positive some argue that at least they are getting something because years ago the music was just getting stolen, I don't buy that argument.


"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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Reply #66 posted 12/17/20 3:06pm

JayCrawford

lastdecember said:



JayCrawford said:


lastdecember said:

Music now is in a different world than it was. From the way you get it, most dont even have a collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had. Streaming is renting regardless of you thinking you own something now you dont that is the difference and why you really cant compare eras. I mean its like comparing A homerun hitter in baseball to now comparing to Babe Ruth or someone like that, guys train now, back then they tossed the ball, there were no weights and supplements, also no rules of what you could do, I mean in the mid 80's Keith Hernandez of the Mets drank beer in the clubhouse and smoked a cigarette on the bench waiting to go back on the field, today its all different with rules and regiments. With Music it is no different you cant compare eras, but this goes in many things, back in the day it was a big thing if you made a film, because of costs and difficulty now some can make films on their phones, many music videos have been shot on phones. So i cant compare someone working and shooting a film on a digital high tech camera to someone like Coppola who shot on film and the editing was cutting and splicing etc..Now with music and the eras you cant compare because the world is different, when the internet came into play and how to get and make music changed, things changed drastically. But also remember as these times changed so did focus, when music stopped selling and sorry that is a factor, when it became a rental and aritsts really could not make money or very little, they began to go back to just doing singles, because the attention of the listener or in this case the renter doesnt have time for an hour long investment into their product, so you still get good artists songs and whatever but you arent going to get THAT artist with THAT appeal of another era, its just not going to happen. So music means whatever to whomever, its something to you that it isnt to me. Someone can post their top artists right now and I pretty much guarantee that very few us share similar artists at all.



Do you think Spotify hurt music?


I think streaming overall hurts artists, there are a few benefits because many new artists can link through social media and then hope their listeners will share or they will end up on a playlist sponsored etc....but the pennies they make that's one of the reasons they can on,y do singles especially if they are doing it all on their own, booking shows, promotion, it's tough I mean they really need hundreds of thousands of streams to even make anything, I mean I know many indie artists that I follow and 10k streams they are lucky to get a few hundred bucks if even, now if they were selling a single physical it's more or people were actually buying it not renting it, and also you better be doing the writing and playing because if you have co writes and a band that money you gotta split you are lucky now to get a cup of coffee. Thing is it's only one of the art forms or entertainment whatever that this is acceptable. So I think it's more negative than positive some argue that at least they are getting something because years ago the music was just getting stolen, I don't buy that argument.




Unfortunately my friend there are so many bullshit arguments younger folks like to make to defend modern music lol. I agree with your whole statement though
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Reply #67 posted 12/17/20 3:56pm

lastdecember

avatar

JayCrawford said:

lastdecember said:


I think streaming overall hurts artists, there are a few benefits because many new artists can link through social media and then hope their listeners will share or they will end up on a playlist sponsored etc....but the pennies they make that's one of the reasons they can on,y do singles especially if they are doing it all on their own, booking shows, promotion, it's tough I mean they really need hundreds of thousands of streams to even make anything, I mean I know many indie artists that I follow and 10k streams they are lucky to get a few hundred bucks if even, now if they were selling a single physical it's more or people were actually buying it not renting it, and also you better be doing the writing and playing because if you have co writes and a band that money you gotta split you are lucky now to get a cup of coffee. Thing is it's only one of the art forms or entertainment whatever that this is acceptable. So I think it's more negative than positive some argue that at least they are getting something because years ago the music was just getting stolen, I don't buy that argument.

Unfortunately my friend there are so many bullshit arguments younger folks like to make to defend modern music lol. I agree with your whole statement though


I also think as an artist like anything else you grow from the work but also those around you I think competition helps build these artists up more, look at any era and you will see how artists constantly releasing and challenging each other with something different.


"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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Reply #68 posted 12/18/20 12:20pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

lastdecember said:

Music now is in a different world than it was. collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had.

There were a lot of people in the past who did not have a record/tape collection. Many just listened to the radio. That isn't much different from streaming other than with the radio, you heard what the DJ played. Streaming is kinda like a free jukebox, you pick what you want to hear and can listen to a specific song as much as you want. If a song doesn't become a radio hit, the station will probably drop it quickly. You don't have to listen to the songs on the radio that you don't like. There were also people who bought street tapes or copied a record from someone else onto a cassette. Later there were dual cassette decks to do the same with tapes.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #69 posted 12/18/20 8:07pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

MickyDolenz said:

lastdecember said:

Music now is in a different world than it was. collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had.

There were a lot of people in the past who did not have a record/tape collection. Many just listened to the radio. That isn't much different from streaming other than with the radio, you heard what the DJ played. Streaming is kinda like a free jukebox, you pick what you want to hear and can listen to a specific song as much as you want. If a song doesn't become a radio hit, the station will probably drop it quickly. You don't have to listen to the songs on the radio that you don't like. There were also people who bought street tapes or copied a record from someone else onto a cassette. Later there were dual cassette decks to do the same with tapes.

Yeah, but unlike streaming I could record whatever I wanted off the radio on cassettes as a kid and then play them when I wanted since I couldn't afford to buy albums and could only to buy 45s for two for a dollar... Didn't discover used vinyl until I was older... razz lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #70 posted 12/18/20 8:15pm

alphastreet

purplethunder3121 said:



MickyDolenz said:




lastdecember said:


Music now is in a different world than it was. collection, they have playlists and libraries stored and lets face it if Spotify went under or something like that most would have no music collections anymore and not even remember what they had.



There were a lot of people in the past who did not have a record/tape collection. Many just listened to the radio. That isn't much different from streaming other than with the radio, you heard what the DJ played. Streaming is kinda like a free jukebox, you pick what you want to hear and can listen to a specific song as much as you want. If a song doesn't become a radio hit, the station will probably drop it quickly. You don't have to listen to the songs on the radio that you don't like. There were also people who bought street tapes or copied a record from someone else onto a cassette. Later there were dual cassette decks to do the same with tapes.




Yeah, but unlike streaming I could record whatever I wanted off the radio on cassettes as a kid and then play them when I wanted since I couldn't afford to buy albums and could only to buy 45s for two for a dollar... Didn't discover used vinyl until I was older... razz lol



Exactly, the music I had was of music videos, and occasional vinyl and tapes. Otherwise recorded from the radio, and started buying cds in the mid 90s
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Reply #71 posted 12/18/20 8:49pm

MickyDolenz

avatar

purplethunder3121 said:

Yeah, but unlike streaming I could record whatever I wanted off the radio on cassettes as a kid and then play them when I wanted since I couldn't afford to buy albums and could only to buy 45s for two for a dollar... Didn't discover used vinyl until I was older... razz lol

I never heard of anyone taping off a jukebox. razz

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #72 posted 12/19/20 2:54am

purplethunder3
121

avatar

MickyDolenz said:

purplethunder3121 said:

Yeah, but unlike streaming I could record whatever I wanted off the radio on cassettes as a kid and then play them when I wanted since I couldn't afford to buy albums and could only to buy 45s for two for a dollar... Didn't discover used vinyl until I was older... razz lol

I never heard of anyone taping off a jukebox. razz

What the heck does a jukebox have to do with anything we're talking about? razz lol I put plenty of change in jukeboxes thoughout the years... lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #73 posted 12/19/20 5:59am

lastdecember

avatar

purplethunder3121 said:

MickyDolenz said:

There were a lot of people in the past who did not have a record/tape collection. Many just listened to the radio. That isn't much different from streaming other than with the radio, you heard what the DJ played. Streaming is kinda like a free jukebox, you pick what you want to hear and can listen to a specific song as much as you want. If a song doesn't become a radio hit, the station will probably drop it quickly. You don't have to listen to the songs on the radio that you don't like. There were also people who bought street tapes or copied a record from someone else onto a cassette. Later there were dual cassette decks to do the same with tapes.

Yeah, but unlike streaming I could record whatever I wanted off the radio on cassettes as a kid and then play them when I wanted since I couldn't afford to buy albums and could only to buy 45s for two for a dollar... Didn't discover used vinyl until I was older... razz lol


yeah my older brother did this all the time and then I started trying to tape things off the radio always starting a second too late or the dj talking over something but that was how I collected till I started saving my allowance and buying 45s at first then albums and then on to cds 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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Reply #74 posted 12/19/20 7:04am

JayCrawford

Buying records will always overcome "streaming" platforms easily.

Nothing beats buying records at the shop and just looking at the album cover itself, it had that theme to it to describe what this album is about. None of the easy skip bullshit through singles like you can now.

Man I miss the vinyl era (60s-80s). Cassettes were awful (unless you didn't have the money to buy records then sure it was convenient for recording stuff off the radio and playing it later). But nothing tops records.
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Reply #75 posted 12/19/20 7:11am

MickyDolenz

avatar

purplethunder3121 said:

What the heck does a jukebox have to do with anything we're talking about? razz lol I put plenty of change in jukeboxes thoughout the years... lol

I said up above that streaming is like a free jukebox instead of a radio station where you're listening to what someone else (like a DJ) chooses to play.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #76 posted 12/19/20 7:17am

MickyDolenz

avatar

JayCrawford said:

Cassettes were awful (unless you didn't have the money to buy records then sure it was convenient for recording stuff off the radio and playing it later).

Pre-recorded cassettes were the same price as the record. When CDs came out, they cost more than both. There was also reel-to-reel and 8-track tapes.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #77 posted 12/19/20 9:55am

phunkdaddy

avatar

MickyDolenz said:

JayCrawford said:

Cassettes were awful (unless you didn't have the money to buy records then sure it was convenient for recording stuff off the radio and playing it later).

Pre-recorded cassettes were the same price as the record. When CDs came out, they cost more than both. There was also reel-to-reel and 8-track tapes.

They generally weren't. I know this because if it was an album by an artist that I was only into

for 2 to 3 songs off it I bought the cassette which was cheaper than buying the album which may have cost a dollar or 2 more.

A lot of cassettes I have I bought them because they were cheaper than the Vinyl LP.

[Edited 12/19/20 9:57am]

Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #78 posted 12/19/20 9:56am

JayCrawford

phunkdaddy said:



MickyDolenz said:




JayCrawford said:


Cassettes were awful (unless you didn't have the money to buy records then sure it was convenient for recording stuff off the radio and playing it later).

Pre-recorded cassettes were the same price as the record. When CDs came out, they cost more than both. There was also reel-to-reel and 8-track tapes.




They generally weren't. I know this because if it was an album by an artist that I was only into


for 2 to 3 songs off it I bought the cassette which was cheaper than buying the whole album.


A lot of cassettes I have I bought them because they were cheaper than the Vinyl LP.




Exactly
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Reply #79 posted 12/19/20 10:01am

phunkdaddy

avatar

JayCrawford said:

phunkdaddy said:

They generally weren't. I know this because if it was an album by an artist that I was only into

for 2 to 3 songs off it I bought the cassette which was cheaper than buying the whole album.

A lot of cassettes I have I bought them because they were cheaper than the Vinyl LP.

Exactly

I remember when CD's took off in popularity around 1993 and 1994 Circuit City always sold

cassettes cheaper than CD's.

Don't laugh at my funk
This funk is a serious joint
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Reply #80 posted 12/19/20 10:10am

MickyDolenz

avatar

phunkdaddy said:

They generally weren't. I know this because if it was an album by an artist that I was only into

for 2 to 3 songs off it I bought the cassette which was cheaper than buying the album which may have cost a dollar or 2 more.

A lot of cassettes I have I bought them because they were cheaper than the Vinyl LP.

They were at the local stores where I live, whether it was a record store or a department store like K-Mart. The only tapes that were cheaper were street tapes sold at flea markets or store parking lots. They were pretty much bootlegs, not official.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #81 posted 12/19/20 10:23am

lastdecember

avatar

MickyDolenz said:

phunkdaddy said:

They generally weren't. I know this because if it was an album by an artist that I was only into

for 2 to 3 songs off it I bought the cassette which was cheaper than buying the album which may have cost a dollar or 2 more.

A lot of cassettes I have I bought them because they were cheaper than the Vinyl LP.

They were at the local stores where I live, whether it was a record store or a department store like K-Mart. The only tapes that were cheaper were street tapes sold at flea markets or store parking lots. They were pretty much bootlegs, not official.

The prices between vinyl and cassettes got closer in the 80's especially, with some differences usually a dollar or maybe two. Funny thing was when albums got phased out, and cds took over the price of cds never swayed in fact it went up and cassettes rose to narrow the gap, but this was all because of the labels, they would charge the retail stores 12 dollars a cd so they couldnt sell it for 9 or 10 because you were losing two dollars a new cd and it added up. So the big retail for music like Tower and Sam Goody couldnt compete with the Wiz or then Best Buy selling below cost, and i always tell people that those places could lose 3 dollars a cd because they made it up on the tv sets and dvd players and vcrs and washing machines and all the other crap Best Buy would sell and make their margin, they were not in the MUSIC RETAIL business like Tower or Goody was.


"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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Reply #82 posted 12/19/20 10:49am

MickyDolenz

avatar

lastdecember said:

The prices between vinyl and cassettes got closer in the 80's especially, with some differences usually a dollar or maybe two. Funny thing was when albums got phased out, and cds took over the price of cds never swayed in fact it went up and cassettes rose to narrow the gap, but this was all because of the labels, they would charge the retail stores 12 dollars a cd so they couldnt sell it for 9 or 10 because you were losing two dollars a new cd and it added up. So the big retail for music like Tower and Sam Goody couldnt compete with the Wiz or then Best Buy selling below cost, and i always tell people that those places could lose 3 dollars a cd because they made it up on the tv sets and dvd players and vcrs and washing machines and all the other crap Best Buy would sell and make their margin, they were not in the MUSIC RETAIL business like Tower or Goody was.

Prices varied depending on the store. The record store I usually bought albums at, all (single) albums were $5.99, LP or tape. But there was a mom and pop record store down the street I could walk to and didn't have to wait for my mom to go somewhere and take me. The same album would be $8.97 or $9.97. The 45s were cheaper at the first store too, but not by much, maybe 30 cents. The neighborhood record store mostly had black artists and R&B, blues, gospel, rap, some comedy like Eddie Murphy/Richard Pryor and very little else though. Then at Mongomery Wards an album would be $13.99. Those record club albums were expensive too. You had to buy a certain amount and if you didn't send in the form on time to cancel it, they would automatically send you the "selection of the month". If you didn't want it, you had to pay to send it back. lol

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #83 posted 12/19/20 11:22am

purplethunder3
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MickyDolenz said:

lastdecember said:

The prices between vinyl and cassettes got closer in the 80's especially, with some differences usually a dollar or maybe two. Funny thing was when albums got phased out, and cds took over the price of cds never swayed in fact it went up and cassettes rose to narrow the gap, but this was all because of the labels, they would charge the retail stores 12 dollars a cd so they couldnt sell it for 9 or 10 because you were losing two dollars a new cd and it added up. So the big retail for music like Tower and Sam Goody couldnt compete with the Wiz or then Best Buy selling below cost, and i always tell people that those places could lose 3 dollars a cd because they made it up on the tv sets and dvd players and vcrs and washing machines and all the other crap Best Buy would sell and make their margin, they were not in the MUSIC RETAIL business like Tower or Goody was.

Prices varied depending on the store. The record store I usually bought albums at, all (single) albums were $5.99, LP or tape. But there was a mom and pop record store down the street I could walk to and didn't have to wait for my mom to go somewhere and take me. The same album would be $8.97 or $9.97. The 45s were cheaper at the first store too, but not by much, maybe 30 cents. The neighborhood record store mostly had black artists and R&B, blues, gospel, rap, some comedy like Eddie Murphy/Richard Pryor and very little else though. Then at Mongomery Wards an album would be $13.99. Those record club albums were expensive too. You had to buy a certain amount and if you didn't send in the form on time to cancel it, they would automatically send you the "selection of the month". If you didn't want it, you had to pay to send it back. lol

What? You didn't rip off Columbia House like all the other kids? lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #84 posted 12/19/20 4:22pm

MickyDolenz

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purplethunder3121 said:

What? You didn't rip off Columbia House like all the other kids? lol

Nah, I was raised in the church and a lot of my older relatives were church people. That's who I was around. I never even thought about doing such a thing.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #85 posted 12/19/20 4:26pm

alphastreet

MickyDolenz said:



purplethunder3121 said:


What? You didn't rip off Columbia House like all the other kids? lol



Nah, I was raised in the church and a lot of my older relatives were church people. That's who I was around. I never even thought about doing such a thing.


Was also raised on religion but not kept from music. Used to order from Columbia house as well when I was a teenager
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Reply #86 posted 12/19/20 4:53pm

MickyDolenz

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alphastreet said:

Was also raised on religion but not kept from music. Used to order from Columbia house as well when I was a teenager

I could listen to regular music. My parents weren't strict like that. I did have some relatives of my grandparents generation who did not want secular music played in their home. Like you couldn't watch American Banstand or Soul Train there. They only listened to and/or sang gospel & spirituals. They called any secular music the blues, no matter what it actually was. If it was a thunderstorm, you had to cut everything off at their house. They would say you're not supposed to be doing anything while the Lord was doing his work.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #87 posted 12/19/20 4:56pm

alphastreet

MickyDolenz said:



alphastreet said:


Was also raised on religion but not kept from music. Used to order from Columbia house as well when I was a teenager

I could listen to regular music. My parents weren't strict like that. I did have some relatives of my grandparents generation who did not want secular music played in their home. Like you couldn't watch American Banstand or Soul Train there. They only listened to and/or sang gospel & spirituals. They called any secular music the blues, no matter what it actually was. If it was a thunderstorm, you had to cut everything off at their house. They would say you're not supposed to be doing anything while the Lord was doing his work.



That sounds extreme, the most I remember was my grandma telling me I get excited over celebrities more than God and that made me feel insecure cause I like to think of myself as spiritual
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Reply #88 posted 12/19/20 6:07pm

purplethunder3
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alphastreet said:

MickyDolenz said:

I could listen to regular music. My parents weren't strict like that. I did have some relatives of my grandparents generation who did not want secular music played in their home. Like you couldn't watch American Banstand or Soul Train there. They only listened to and/or sang gospel & spirituals. They called any secular music the blues, no matter what it actually was. If it was a thunderstorm, you had to cut everything off at their house. They would say you're not supposed to be doing anything while the Lord was doing his work.

That sounds extreme, the most I remember was my grandma telling me I get excited over celebrities more than God and that made me feel insecure cause I like to think of myself as spiritual

My Dad was strict and religious but he didn't stop us from listening to the music we wanted. I don't think he paid much attention... lol He even got my sister and I eight-track players one Christmas. That was right before they stopped making them. razz lol

"Music gives a soul to the universe, wings to the mind, flight to the imagination and life to everything." --Plato

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #89 posted 12/19/20 6:14pm

alphastreet

purplethunder3121 said:



alphastreet said:


MickyDolenz said:


I could listen to regular music. My parents weren't strict like that. I did have some relatives of my grandparents generation who did not want secular music played in their home. Like you couldn't watch American Banstand or Soul Train there. They only listened to and/or sang gospel & spirituals. They called any secular music the blues, no matter what it actually was. If it was a thunderstorm, you had to cut everything off at their house. They would say you're not supposed to be doing anything while the Lord was doing his work.



That sounds extreme, the most I remember was my grandma telling me I get excited over celebrities more than God and that made me feel insecure cause I like to think of myself as spiritual

My Dad was strict and religious but he didn't stop us from listening to the music we wanted. I don't think he paid much attention... lol He even got my sister and I eight-track players one Christmas. That was right before they stopped making them. razz lol



Aw that sounds like a sweet memory
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