15.7.14

RECORD BUYING HABITS and The Deflation of CDs

The recent closure of the big HMV shop towards the eastern end of Oxford Street has dramatically changed my record buying habits. I guess I was pretty lucky to have one of the biggest record shops in the UK just around the corner from where I work and I used to enjoy browsing among the cut-price sections to see if I could pick up a Greatest Hits for a fiver, or downstairs among the specialist sections for old R&R, R&B, jazz, folk and country. It’s a Sports Direct now, its only concession to music being t-shirts with ‘official’ band logos that in the same basement sell for something like £30 each – £30 for a t-shirt with ‘The Who’ and an arrow on it for christsakes – so now, like most everyone else I guess, I get my CDs from Amazon, use my phone to buy the odd album or individual track on iTunes or pick up the odd cheapo item in the supermarket. And occasionally I browse in a real record shop, like the one at Guildford off Castle Street which is even more untidy than my son’s bedroom
         In Skipton in Yorkshire where I was brought up there were three record shops in the fifties and sixties, Woods (dedicated), John Phillip (which sold other electrical goods) and Ramsbottoms (which also sold other electrical goods and had a coffee bar too). I patronised all three and took it for granted that a town the size of Skipton would have as many record shops as it did butchers and greengrocers. 




It’s a while since I’ve been back up there but the last time I went – about eight years ago – only John Phillip had survived and when curiosity took me to their website recently there was no mention of CDs anywhere which suggests they’ve stopped stocking records entirely. Woods long ago became a Chinese restaurant and Ramsbottoms a Boots. Maybe another record shop has opened up somewhere in Skipton that I don’t know about.
         Woods was my favourite: classical and light music on the ground floor and rock and pop in the basement. I bought my first LPs (no one ever called them albums in those days) there – Elvis, Buddy H and Everlys – for 35 old shillings, which is £1.75 today. I loved to browse in the LP racks, checking out what they had, and of course you could listen to records, 45s mostly, before you bought them, as you could in Phillips and Ramsbottoms.  
         Like most boys in rural areas I started driving early, long before I had a licence, on farm tracks and around a quarry owned by a friend of the family, so by the time I reached 17 the test was a doddle. In those days a gallon of petrol cost about six shilling, or 30p in today’s money. Nowadays a litre of petrol costs about £1.30, and there are 4.5 litres to a gallon, so I’m now paying nearly six quid for what once cost me 30p, twenty times as much. To put this into a record buying perspective, the last cheap CD I bought in Sainsbury’s cost me £2, but if CDs had kept inflationary pace with petrol even this discount CD would have cost me almost £40, and a full price one – what is full price today… £8.99? – between four and five times that, ie getting on for £200. Meanwhile those t-shirts with ‘official’ band logos in what used to be HMV are selling for the price of maybe three or four new CDs.
         Can anyone tell when it was that t-shirts that promote acts became more valuable than the music they produce. And why? I've always taken the view that acts should pay you to advertise them by walking around with their logos on your chest, especially if you’re female and curvy, not that this is likely to cut much ice in an era when the average CD is worth less than the price of a pint of beer. 

No comments:

Post a Comment