Record stores will be heading for bargain bins
Los Angeles Times
Jan. 9, 2003
Record store operators are bracing for a new round of cutbacks.
Today, Best Buy Co. is expected to announce the closure of a about 150 of the roughly 1,300 Sam Goody and other stores in its Musicland division.
And the anticipated move by one of the United States' largest record store chains is only the most dramatic in a new round of closings spurred by last year's 11 percent drop in album sales.
Wherehouse Entertainment is expected to close 30 of its roughly 400 stores, company executives said. Trans World, owner of FYE and other stores, meanwhile, plans to shutter about two dozen of its 900 locations.
The new store closings accelerate a trend that was already under way, thanks to back-to-back annual declines in record sales. The problem has been aggravated by price wars with mass merchants.
During the late 1990s, the five major record labels helped bail out shaky retailers by subsidizing advertising costs for chains that agreed to price albums under company guidelines. But federal regulators in 2000 forced labels to halt the practice as anti-competitive.
Cuda
Los Angeles Times
Jan. 9, 2003
Record store operators are bracing for a new round of cutbacks.
Today, Best Buy Co. is expected to announce the closure of a about 150 of the roughly 1,300 Sam Goody and other stores in its Musicland division.
And the anticipated move by one of the United States' largest record store chains is only the most dramatic in a new round of closings spurred by last year's 11 percent drop in album sales.
Wherehouse Entertainment is expected to close 30 of its roughly 400 stores, company executives said. Trans World, owner of FYE and other stores, meanwhile, plans to shutter about two dozen of its 900 locations.
The new store closings accelerate a trend that was already under way, thanks to back-to-back annual declines in record sales. The problem has been aggravated by price wars with mass merchants.
During the late 1990s, the five major record labels helped bail out shaky retailers by subsidizing advertising costs for chains that agreed to price albums under company guidelines. But federal regulators in 2000 forced labels to halt the practice as anti-competitive.
Cuda