Showing posts with label BMG. Show all posts
Showing posts with label BMG. Show all posts

Thursday, February 24, 2011

My First Record Club


I started collecting albums when I was 8. The first record I ever owned was Destroyer by Kiss, which I purchased at a yard sale for 25 cents. I would love to say that I still have that record, but I’ve long since traded it away (for other albums, I believe). Of course, I do own the remastered CD, so it’s not like I don’t have Destroyer, I just don’t have my first copy of Destroyer.

When I turned 10, I got two cassette tapes for Christmas that I had been dying to own. The first was Knee Deep In The Hoopla by Starship. I was a huge fan of We Built This City, which sounds dated and cheesy to me now, but at the time, it was an incredible rock song. The second album was Stay Hungry by Twisted Sister. We’re Not Gonna Take It was a massive anthem that I had to hear on a repeat basis. I still own both of those cassettes and they both still work.

When I hit my teen years, I started requesting tapes for my birthday. The bands of the day that I heard on the radio needed to be added to my collection. I would borrow albums that friends had and copy them until I could afford the original myself. When I would get birthday or holiday money, it went to buying more albums to add to my collection. Then one day I saw an ad in the paper (or maybe it was in a music magazine) for Columbia House.

Buy 12 albums for a penny, the ad proclaimed. 12 albums for a penny? What was the catch? How was it possible to get 12 albums for such a low price? How could I sign up for this? After doing some research, I decided to give it a shot. I had saved some of my allowance and by then I was working (odd jobs and part time selling newspapers), so I knew that I could pay the bill when it arrived. I picked my 12 albums, bought the first one for the low price of $7.99 and then got three more for free. 16 albums all at one time was an amazing experience.

I remember sending away the coupon with my album selections and waiting for the mail to arrive. Every day, I would check the mailbox, hoping that my shipment would come. It took a while, but the day that package showed up was one of the finest days of my youthful life. Seeing the big brown box with my name on it was a jubilant experience. When I ripped that box open and saw the massive amount of cassette tapes that fell out, I was in Heaven.

I had never received that many albums at one time. I was overwhelmed! How was I going to listen to them all? And of course, I wanted to play every one of them right then and there. Unfortunately, there just wasn’t enough time to pull that off before bedtime. Compromising, I picked the one I wanted to hear the most and popped it into my little boom box. Then I tore open the packaging of all the other cassettes and read their linear notes. It was one of the greatest days of my life.

From that moment on, I was hooked. Record clubs became my best friend (and a huge drain on my bank account). As the booklets showed up every month, I would go through them, picking out albums that I didn’t own and ordering them for my collection. Every time a package appeared in my mailbox, I got that same giddy feeling that I did the day I received my first one. Getting new music brought me phenomenal joy.

From Columbia House, I would go on to join BMG music and order even more cassettes. Both companies are responsible for filling the majority of my record collection early on in life. They also were the recipients of a lot of my money, but it was worth it. I stayed a member of both record clubs until they finally dissolved in the mid 2000s. With the advent of ITunes and online record shops, Columbia House and BMG could no longer keep up, even though they tried as hard as they could. When they finally closed their doors, it was a sad feeling. It was as if part of my youth had been killed forever. No longer could I order 12 CDs at a time and wait for that package to arrive in the mail.

These days, it’s all instant gratification. We can now go onto ITunes and order any album that our heart desires. If we don’t want the whole record, we can order just the single, or select songs. And while that is really convenient, it takes away from the joy of discovering the entire album. It also takes away from building patience. Once an order was placed with a record company, it was days before that package arrived, which helped me to appreciate it more when it came. Now, with instant downloading, it’s one listen, maybe two, and then it’s off to the next great thing. Hey, what else can I buy online? It’s a shame and it takes away from the joy of the entire record.

When I look over my vast music collection, I still see a lot of cassette tapes that I got from either BMG or Columbia House. When I listen to them, it’s with a smile on my face. Remembering how I would get goosebumps while opening the package filled with multiple albums for me to enjoy. I don’t know if I will ever experience that feeling again, and that is a real shame. Columbia House and BMG Music, you are missed. Thanks for all the great memories.

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Monday, April 13, 2009

BMG No More

As yet another sign of the end of physical music, BMG music service is going out of business, ceasing to service your CD needs (or wants). In an email set about a month ago to all members, BMG stated that their music service was being discontinued as of June30th. This is a real shame. Since Columbia House stopped servicing music years ago (opting to sell that portion of their business to BMG), there will no longer be a mail order music shop that offers you “12 CDs for the price of one, with nothing more to buy…ever! “

I’m going to miss that. Columbia House and BMG helped to grow a large portion of my enormous music collection and they did it 6, 9, 12 CDs at a time. Nothing was more exciting than seeing that package come in the mail, filled with multiple goodies that I could listen to for weeks on end. The feeling was like no other, and I exercised my right to feel that way quite often.

While this is a nostalgic sadness for me, it is a real nail in the coffin of the physical format music. As more and more people are using their computers, IPODs, phones, and MP3 players to store their music, they are drifting further and further away from the physical format of music. The younger generation especially is going to be a digitized music appreciator and will likely have less physical formatted music than any other before them. I know that my stepdaughter has a very limited supply of CDs (most of them my wife and I purchased for her), but she has a ton of music on her IPOD and phone. That is the way of the future.

I understand it from a convenience standpoint. I mean, who wouldn’t want to take their entire music collection with them wherever they go? For me, however, it’s more than just the music. It’s the thrill of the linear notes. It’s the excitement of holding the actual CD in your hand. I know we are all moving toward a greener tomorrow, and that CD jewel cases contribute to a lot of used plastic, but I plan on keeping mine stored forever anyway, along with a few CD players and stereo. I’ll just will them to someone who will leave them for someone, and so on, and so forth.

And perhaps the loss of BMG is for the best. They certainly did get a lot of my money, although I know I’ll just find a new way to spend it on music. It might even be in the form of downloading albums for instant gratification.

What do you think? Are you going to miss the mail order music clubs, or have you already moved on to the instant download world?

Comments are open. Feel free to post some.