Over the weekend, we took a ride to the Burlington Mall along the Rt. 128 loop in Massachusetts. I was pleasantly surprised that it was bustling with people, and finding a parking space was the usual cut-throat affair, like in the olden days (I guess when unemployment's nearly zero, people like to shop at upscale places - end of rant).
Anyway, I wandered into a Newbury Comics for the 1st time in years. So you know how it was reported that album sales have surpassed CD sales? Now I know why. The place has one little section of CDs; you go from A to Z in the span of about 12 feet. But the albums are spread out over entire aisles of racks, and all the feature racks - like new releases, and top sellers - are albums. The prices haven't changed; albums are still $28 - $33, which means I'm not buying any. Also, the majority of the store's real estate is dominated by action figures, graphic novels, posters, videos, and various other "gift ideas".
In a way, this is not surprising; since most people are downloading new (and old) music. And those who do visit a physical store are looking for big, physical things - like albums; rather than digital media that they can't play anyway. My younger daughter often buys me albums for my birthday (those are the only new albums I have). I was buying her CDs of new artists that I thought she'd like, but she no longer has easy access to a CD player; there's not one in her laptop or iPad, and I'd have to loan her my external CD/DVD burner.
But who's buying all these $30 albums? And what are they playing them on? I don't see any signs of a turntable renaissance. All I see is the ones that convert albums to USB. I've also seen these ridiculous statistics, that a high percentage of people buying albums don't have anything to play them on. So what's the deal?