The (Unfortunate) Fall of Tower Records | Expanding Into Disaster | History in the Dark

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 16 ก.ย. 2024
  • Tower Records was once a big player in the music retail business. Their stores were everywhere and their staff were known as avid music fans who could help customers find exactly what they were looking for. As they grew, they settled into a rapid expansion program which involved large loans. This happened right before the market would shift drastically from physical formats to digital. You can do the math as to what happened here.
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ความคิดเห็น • 316

  • @brianfuller757
    @brianfuller757 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +41

    As a former Tower Records employee , I'll say that it was a great place to work. We were all music nerds.

  • @haydendegrow945
    @haydendegrow945 19 วันที่ผ่านมา +95

    My family still has a mighty collection of vinyl, CDs, and cassettes. Physical media ain't dead. It's just different now.

    • @AnimalsVehiclesAndMore
      @AnimalsVehiclesAndMore 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      Vinyl records are still incredibly popular these days, as they're still available for sale, as well as vinyl record players.

    • @DelbelOfTheVoid
      @DelbelOfTheVoid 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      So does my dad.

    • @chrismason2876
      @chrismason2876 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      I funded a huge move by selling my record collection about 10 years ago. Thought I was gonna get a couple hundred, ended up with a couple of grand!

    • @nap871
      @nap871 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Cds are the best medium imo.they still have high demand. Audiofiles swear by vinyl but its in their head. I was around during vinyls heyday snd they were a real pain in the azz. Needles cartridges all sorts of equip req. Plus vinyl required a delicate hand.. Sound quality , ease of use, they don't go bad make cds tops.

    • @savage751
      @savage751 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      My grandparents owned a bar for like 30 years and I still have well over 5000 records from the jukebox they had (mostly 45's)

  • @JediHangout
    @JediHangout 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    Tower Records was not only part of my life as a teenager, but it became a HUGE part of my life. I worked at the two flagship stores in Los Angeles, The Sunset and Sherman Oaks (but also Glendale and Thousand Oaks). I worked in the Classical section and became a buyer before I finally left the company. I worked there while I was in college as a music student, which is a dream place for classical musicians. Russ made it clear that the classical and the Jazz section were to be important. He made it clear that all sections of the store and genres would have selections that were more than the completion. This is what we were known for. It was more of a family than co-workers for us. I still know many of the people I worked with at the stores here in Los Angeles. Russ was a good employer. He use to come and visit and hang out with the employees in the back room. He wanted to know who we were and what we valued about music. By the time the company liquidated I had moved on to working for an orchestra, but my co-workers where as I said family. I was at the Sherman Oaks store on the day it was officially liquidating. I went into the back room with one of the supervisors and she and I hugged and were in tears. It was not just a retail store, but an experience.

  • @crashthevacuum
    @crashthevacuum 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +23

    Tower Records might be the retail chain I miss the most, it was just so much fun to hang out there and browse everything

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I always made it a point to go there and buy some laser discs when I was on vacation in a place that had one. I think every time I visited my grandparents in SoCal, I went there at least once.

  • @athrunzala75
    @athrunzala75 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +92

    It’s wild to me that Tower Records is still thriving in Japan to the point they regularly have collaborations with anime and video games. First time I saw one of those collabs (the Granblue Fantasy one, specifically) I was thinking “wait, Tower Records still exists??”

    • @Megamibunny
      @Megamibunny 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +12

      In Japan physical media is still pretty popular. Floppy disks and cassette tapes are still used

    • @chazer793
      @chazer793 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      Physical media never went away in Japan.

    • @dylives7667
      @dylives7667 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +10

      It wouldn't be the 1st time a US franchise finds success outside their country.
      Speaking of Japan, The 7 Eleven stores. Prior to their recent rebranding at home, asian 7 Elevens were proper stores compared to the previous ones in the USA.
      Now, going to my country, Mexico.
      Blockbuster used to thrive here, until its shareholders pulled the plug and sold it. All its new owner did to its new acquisition was just renaming it.
      And, just 2 years later, shut the whole operation down.
      And, while Sears is long gone back home, it's still in business over here with no signs of going away.

    • @hardcoremagicalgirl
      @hardcoremagicalgirl 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@dylives7667 7 Eleven is bringing their Japanese food distributor stateside which I think is a fantastic idea. In my area, Race Trac and Wawa are competing with their food options and I feel like adding the fresh food from the Japanese menu gives them an edge over the rest. Personally I have stomach issues and rice is easy to digest so if they started offering onigiri, that would get me in the door consistently.

    • @DelbelOfTheVoid
      @DelbelOfTheVoid 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@Megamibunnywoah that’s actually pretty cool!

  • @knightsonofjack
    @knightsonofjack 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +34

    Vinyl absolutely wears out, it wears more every time you listen. A CD could theoretically last forever if it doesn't get scratched.

    • @ShinGoukiSan
      @ShinGoukiSan 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

      @@knightsonofjack CDs absolutely do not last forever. Disc Rot will eventually kill them

    • @davidgarris2513
      @davidgarris2513 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      @@ShinGoukiSan Really? A CD properly stored lasts indefinitely. I still have some from 1984 when they first came out and they're fine. ... David Jonathan Garris Esquire Ret Warner Bros 🐾🐾🐕

    • @redcat9436
      @redcat9436 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      I've never had a CD fail me in 30 years. There was an issue with aluminum corrosion on the early CD's but that was quickly rectified.

    • @CatFish107
      @CatFish107 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      The problem you might run into at some point is availability of drives to read the optical media. It's getting less and less common to have optical drives in computers, and far less home audio products with cd players. Over time, I might imagine they will become increasingly difficult to keep in working order. For a smaller niche version of this, look into the trouble people already have keeping nintendo GameCubes running.

    • @Biker_Gremling
      @Biker_Gremling 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      I have purchased several CDs that were 35 years old, definitely not properly stored. Cleaned them up and the rip was 99%-100% accurate. Other CDs I've bough where thrashed and most of the tracks were perfect. The major issue are burned CD, at 20-25 years the can be hit or miss. But pressed CDs will hold on forever.

  • @jdnelms62
    @jdnelms62 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    Great video! I lived in LA for nearly 17 years and I shopped at Tower Records regularly. Many a Saturday night I would hang at the Valley store and listen to stuff. However my greatest experience was in 1995, at the Tower Records on Sunset Boulevard, when I was approached by a CNN crew to give my opinion on the new Michael Jackson album. I expressed how Jackson was a fading musical genius, the album seemed to be a diversion from his legal problems. Off camera the CNN reporter and camera man laughed in that they shared my opinion entirely. I didn’t have cable so I never saw myself on TV. Ironically later that summer, at the San Diego Comicon, I met up with an old buddy of mine, whose Air Force captain brother stationed in Guam, had seen it! He.called his brother Jeff in the middle of the night saying, “I just saw your friend James on CNN bad mouthing Michael Jackson!”
    Thanks Tower Records for the great memories.

  • @GeekFilter
    @GeekFilter 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +76

    That woman in the opening is far far too excited for Toni Basil!

    • @JamilaJibril-e8h
      @JamilaJibril-e8h 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@GeekFilter 😂😂😂😂

    • @ShazeemKhan
      @ShazeemKhan 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      90s ads, so much energy. She was fine tho, not just Mickey 😂

    • @Biker_Gremling
      @Biker_Gremling 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      If you close your eyes, doesn't sound like an add for a new album release

  • @kobebarka8633
    @kobebarka8633 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +41

    As a person from Sacramento thank you for doing this wonderful piece on a place that was a part of my childhood.

    • @bayareanewman1566
      @bayareanewman1566 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kobebarka8633 I’m from Gilroy, and would regularly go to the Location in San Jose (or Campbell.. it’s right near there) and I’d get my music. Walmart? Never! It was like that old saying… it’s not necessarily about the destination, but it’s about the journey. The hunt. The advice of the staff, all that. It’s a whole experience that can’t be replicated by Spotify. It’s a feeling of anticipation…. You know what I mean? A sense is “discovering” something. It’s hard to explain. But the whole process of finding that one song/album/tape….. that none of your friends had. It was an adventure in itself. At 11, listening to the Dark Side of the Moon my parents had in a box in the garage, in like 1985….. especially since they had a Sansui receiver pumping out 80 watts RMS to 2 Boc Ventura speakers….was an epic experience that can’t be replicated. “Welcome my friend……. To the machine” and there was a bass drop, that my friend told me he could hear from his house, and his parents thought there was an earthquake

    • @natehanneman6763
      @natehanneman6763 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@kobebarka8633 me too! My high school was behind country club mall and every day after school my friends and I would go to the tower on Watt Avenue and then either go to the arcade at the bowling alley or hang out at the mall. Good times.

    • @TimmyCherry
      @TimmyCherry 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      We had so little pop culture cool in Sacramento, in a state full of pop culture cool. Tower Record kinda made me feel cool being from Sacramento, even though most people probably didn't know that's where it was based.

    • @bugaljackson494
      @bugaljackson494 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Same here, grew up around parts of north sacramento in the early 2000's, I remember going to the location around there. I think it was along watt avenue, and had some other tower-named shop next to it.

    • @johnnysunrocket8618
      @johnnysunrocket8618 5 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@bugaljackson494 I think you’re talking about the Broadway store in Sac there was Tower restaurant, Tower theater, Tower Books and of course Tower Records 😎👍

  • @kevinriehl5906
    @kevinriehl5906 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +28

    I was there, I was around, I was a musician, I was a teenager and a young adult--NOBODY was buying digital, EVERYONE was stealing. They still are. "I don't own the copyright. This is for educational purposes only." That's the definition of bull$#!+.

    • @ShazeemKhan
      @ShazeemKhan 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

      😂 true let the arists overcharge for songs they easily make up & companies overcharge for media & renting u songs😂
      Makes sense.
      Charge cheaper, ppl will be less inclined to "steal".
      Incredibly easy stuff😊❤

    • @MrJoeyWheeler
      @MrJoeyWheeler 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Well, here's the sad reality;
      The true value of any digital good is $0. It's infinitely reproduceable and thus has no actual scarcity. Digital wares are worthless by definition. You can try your best to minimise that, but at the end of the day you're at the mercy of those who actually want to buy your product.
      Sidenote, not "stealing". That would imply leaving you without anything. Copying. There is a meaningful difference.

    • @CatFish107
      @CatFish107 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I tell yah what, I appreciate being able to buy from artists on bandcamp. No need for major labels, they can just self publish, charge a fair price, and I can get an album I enjoy through legit means for less than I used to pay for cds or cassettes as a teenager. And the musician sees more of that money than they would have back in the day.

    • @triangle8181
      @triangle8181 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kevinriehl5906 Well game companies aren't helping.With there attitude of "your buying a license we can take away anytime we want, not the game itself" and streaming with getting rid of shows so they won't have to pay royalties, or the fim industry making endless sequels and burning actually good films for tax write offs.

    • @StinkyBlack1
      @StinkyBlack1 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@kevinriehl5906 buying digital rights is a waste of money, ask me how I know. There’s been hundreds of songs and videos where their providers lost the rights and then you can’t access your paid content. What a hassle. Also anyone stealing was never going to buy anyway, see how that works?

  • @TheMediaHoarder
    @TheMediaHoarder 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I worked at their main office the last 5 years they were in business. Glad you mentioned that it closed because a liquidation firm was the highest bidder, they didn’t just decide to go out of business like some accounts say.
    Best Buy and Target KILLED Tower on new release pricing. They sold new and popular titles for less than wholesale cost, just to get people into their stores. There was no way Tower could match that without losing money. I even got some things at those stores cheaper than I could with my employee discount at Tower. It was SO nice of those stores to then decide they don’t really want to sell media at all after helping to put the REAL stores out of business. I hope Best Buy is the next to go under.

    • @nap871
      @nap871 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      It's calledcompetition. It's not nice but it served the buyer. Would you still prefer a world where you were forced to buy from your neighborhood pharmacist who jacked prices at a rate that the mafia considered obscene.

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @TheMediaHoarder . . . Since you worked at Tower in its final years, something I want to share with you as a Tower retail employee in 1978 ~ 79:
      It surprised me when I learned that Russ Solomon had lived to the year 2018, as when I saw him at the store I worked at in the Spring of 1979, he looked a good decade or two older than his 53 years; which I only found out about his birth year upon his passing.
      In the online images I've seen about Russ, he looked healthier in his latter years than he did in 1979.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@bloqk16 I met him a few times, he never seemed really old to me. This was from 2001-07.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@nap871 In this case, the competition put these stores out of business and THEN stopped selling movies and music, when they were the only places left where you could buy it.

  • @alexhajnal107
    @alexhajnal107 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +20

    06:22 The almost-complete (and virtually overnight) shift from vinyl to CDs wasn't primarily due to people's shifting preferences. Rather record companies started refusing to accept returns on unsold vinyl records but continued to accept them for CDs. This meant that stocking vinyl was a costly risk for stores and most switched formats very abruptly.
    CDs were also sold in boxes half the width but the same height as an LP (jewel case in cardboard box) which meant they could be stocked in the same bins formerly used for LPs/12"s (this also reduced shrinkage).

    • @kuebby
      @kuebby 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Thanks for that factoid, I always wondered about those cardboard boxes that some CDs were held in.

    • @davidgarris2513
      @davidgarris2513 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What are you babbling about? Vinyl always sucked. Cassettes sucked. CD's were simply better. I was floor manager at Tower in Schaumburg Illinois. .... David Jonathan Garris Esquire Ret Warner Bros 🐾🐶🐕

  • @lordmaul3
    @lordmaul3 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    Tower Records sold imports and hard to find CD's that were out-of-print that you couldn't get at your local Walmizzy. I was looking for "The Real Chuckeeboo" album released in 1988 by the UK R&b known as Loose Ends. One day I drove to the Tower Records in Buckhead Atlanta and struck gold. I was looking it for years. It was an import CD straight from England.

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Yes! You brought up a point about Tower back in the 1970s that differentiated itself from other record retailers: Import albums.
      Generally, the vinyl on imports were of a better quality that what was made in the US.
      Imports also offered song titles by artists that US labels no longer carried. I recall Rockabilly artist Carl Perkins was among the selections found in the Import section at Tower; whereas there were no domestic titles of Perkins albums to be found.

    • @lordmaul3
      @lordmaul3 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@bloqk16 They didn't have a Tower Records store in my hometown of Kankakee, Illinois when I was a youngster. I discovered them when I moved to Atlanta back in the fall of 1989. At the time I was still listening to cassette tapes on my Boombox and Sony Walkman before I eventually transitioned to CD's. The transition was slow because CD's and CD Players were hella expensive back in the 1990's. Yes the majority of the hard to find music and out-of-print albums I purchased was at Tower Records. That's a fact.

  • @gedaman
    @gedaman 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    I remember there was a Tower Records that opened in 1995 close to my house. I had just gotten a CD player for the first time and thought that was the coolest store.

  • @imseeno
    @imseeno 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I'm a 90s kid and grew up in the Sacramento suburbs. I knew of Tower but I wasn't really appreciative physical media during my younger years. During my university years at Sac State, I often went to restaurants around the Tower Theatre and that's when I learned of the history of Tower Records. I thought it was really cool and I wished I was able to experience its peak.
    Now, I live in Japan. Tower Records is still huge here. And Tower Records in Shibuya is ICONIC. And I've lost count on how many different "No Music, No Life" inspired logos I've seen for different businesses and products here.

  • @unr3alGaming
    @unr3alGaming 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    Yet another brand which was once iconic that fell. Thinking on it for a bit, I realized just about every single store that I really enjoyed going to in my youth is now gone. KB Toys, Toys R Us, CompUSA, Ames, Sears, Circuit City, EB Games, Software Etc, Sam Goody, OfficeMax, Radio Shack, FYE, Payless Shoe Source, Blockbuster, Video Update and of course GameStop, although not actually gone completely, has been struggling for years and all of the nearby locations that once stood as recent as a year ago are now gone, even the ones inside the malls. And meanwhile here I am trying to give the local Best Buy and record store some business to try to keep their lights on, likely in vain. The last two times I went to GameStop, I actually bought their disc protection plan just to throw them a few extra dollars. I remember when I was much younger, I applied for a job at GameStop and was offered a position, but they offered me several dollars less an hour than I had just been making in another retail job, resulting in me turning them down.

    • @moldyapples
      @moldyapples 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Oh man, you're making this boomer feel OLD! Used to spend a lot of time at the Towers in Campbell & Mountain View, CA. Bought so many electronic parts at Radio Shack, Craftsman tools at Sears, even Fry's is gone! Just think, here in the heart of Silicon Valley, you can't go to a store and buy a friggin' resistor! (If you know someplace, PLEASE tell me) Well, that's enough rambling for this old codger, I think it's time for my nap…👴

  • @ntag411
    @ntag411 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    I've noticed the start of the decline in leisure from the early 90s. From the decline of shopping malls, physical media sales to physical media rentals, the end of the Cold War appears to have made a real impact. Online media sales in the form of streaming and controlled downloads have never yielding the revenue of physical media. The studios for movies and music have largely disappeared.

  • @scottnichols3685
    @scottnichols3685 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +13

    Sometime n the last few years or so of Tower Records, I caught their store in Marina del Rey, California falsifying sales tax on their registers. I made a purchase and noticed that the sales tax was quite a bit higher than the normal applicable sales tax for that area.
    I questioned it, and they attempted to dismiss me. The manager approached me and tried to bully me into accepting his fake math. I threatened to call the police. At that point, he agreed to refund the excess sales tax they charged me. I went home and filed a complaint with the police over the phone against the store.
    The store soon closed in advance of the whole chain going out of business. It is clear to me that they were pulling some shady stuff to try to bolster their revenues. I can only imagine how many people the Marina del Rey Store cheated before I caught them.

    • @nap871
      @nap871 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Nice job. They operate like the govt and think everyone is stupid. It's only most people who are stupid

    • @danielcarlson800
      @danielcarlson800 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I believe you. People who worked there thought they didn't shit, and all patrons were beneath them. Soon after I decided to switch to FYE, Tower folded.

  • @stflaw
    @stflaw 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    During the 70s and 80s, Tower Records on Sunset Blvd. was an amazing place to be on a Saturday night. People stopping by on their way to or from the rock clubs, famous musicians and actors popping in, people just hanging out and talking music. The place would just be buzzing with energy.

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    I worked for Tower Records in the late 1970s, where print volumes could be written about the good, bad, notorious, infamous, and absurd aspects that went on in that retailer.
    Here is a highlight I'll delve into:
    Back in the vinyl days of the 1960s to the 80s, Tower had a unique return policy for the albums: The customer, with receipt in-hand, could return an opened and played LP album if he/she did not like it after giving it a listen at home, and exchange it for a different album title of equal price. So it meant that a customer could take a chance on buying a record, and if that record wasn't agreeable to the music taste with the customer, the record could be exchanged for another record/album title.
    How did they allow for such a generous exchange policy? Each store had a vinyl-shrink-wrap process that would 're-seal' the returned album in the clear wrapping, making the album appear to look factory-fresh. Whereupon that returned/resealed album had a new price sticker affixed to the wrapper, and said album being placed back on the retail shelves for re-sale under the guise of being new. I can say that first-hand as I worked many shifts with the 're-sealing' mechanisms consisting of a wrapping board with a hot wire cutter and a roll of clear vinyl wrapping material; with the second mechanism being a conveyor-belt heat tunnel to shrink-fit the clear vinyl wrap on the album.
    That re-sealing process met its demise when legal actions were taken against Tower in the early 1980s, one in particular by the District Attorney's office of Santa Clara County, California (Silicon Valley), which found Tower Records guilty of selling 'used' merchandise (re-sealed albums) as 'new' merchandise. Tower was forced to post a sign at the point-of-sale in the store to state that the store did not re-seal the albums.
    What may have prompted the legal action with Tower may have been the result of the high-volume of albums being re-sealed. Prior to my leaving Tower in 1979 for other employment, the manufacturing quality of the vinyl LPs for the albums took a nose-dive with the public, where defective records returns to Tower were hovering around 20 percent or more. The problem with that was that record distributors allowed a five-percent, or lower, accepted return rate for defective records. So, local management mandated that unless the vinyl record looked flagrantly defective, they were to be re-sealed and put on the retail shelves. So, us employees were to eyeball the vinyl records, give it a wipe-down with a record cleaning silicon cloth, and re-seal it.
    There's more I could write about how some of the store managers were ill-tempered; the rampant drug use; the lousy wages; the surliness among the retail clerks; the corruption of record label representatives with local store management to falsify sales reports; and the eye-opening cultural aspects of the employees that were an education in itself, but that can wait for another time.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      Wow, that’s crooked. As an obsessive collector I don’t buy used stuff just to save money. The last year CDs were in longboxes, Tower started tossing them and putting the jewel cases in plastic bags on the shelves. I stopped buying CDs from them for a long time because of that.

    • @nap871
      @nap871 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      All they had to do was label them like new with a short description of the grading and there'd be no issue.
      Sounds like the 70s. No good old days folks.....1920s were as corrupt as he'll.

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      @@nap871 I'm not certain what the regulations were with regards to retailing back then when it came to branding record albums as 'like new.'
      But, I can say for certainty when I worked there that the aspects of: time; competency; attention, to inspect and 'grade' the vinyl records; along with the additional accounting work involved, would have been detrimental to the store's operation if 'like-new' albums were added to the store's inventory mix.
      - The time: The employees coverage for the store were kept to minimums, as they were kept busy keeping the store tidy, doing product inventory, keeping the shelves stocked, and assisting customers . . . all being performed with a slacker mentality.
      - The competency: As alluded to above, many of the employees were slackers, with a percentage of them infused with substances that inhibited their workplace performance. When it comes to quality employees, you get what you paid for. In the case of Tower, they were paying minimum wage. A percentage of the new-hires were young adults that had knowledge of music genres, but with attitudes and work ethics that could have made them military 4-F . . . and not for medical reasons.
      - The attention: Which is related to competency. Doing visual grading can be subjective. There's an affinity with companies having quality control issues that employs slackers. The wild-card with the issue of quality grading is with the customers' home system turntable, as vinyl record warp-age was the predominant issue with defective returns. In the 1970s, there was this mentality that having the lightest possible tonearm tracking with the turntable would minimize record wear, hence, a slightly warped LP record that would not track with a half-gram tonearm setting would play fine with a tonearm tracking at 2 grams (which is my preference). My tonearm tracking weight went counter to the audiophile snobs that insisted on a one-gram, or lighter, setting for the turntable's tonearm.
      - Accounting: Keeping the books was still done in the work-intensive manual way. The era of computerized accounting, with bar-code scanning, was still years away at Tower when I worked there. All point-of-sale transactions had to be done manually. Adding a 'like-new LP album' price point button on the cash register would have been an additional burden to the myriad of price points for Tower retailing, as the point-of-sale clerk ringing up the merchandise had to deal with separate codes for: 45 singles; classical LPs; cut-out LPs; Country LPs; Rock & Contemporary artists LPs; Oldies LPs; Import LPs; cassettes; 8 track tapes; and probably a few more I don't recall after all these decades.
      In addition, there was the quarterly store-wide inventory that was manually done with pencil and paper, with an assist with hand-held calculators.
      Things were running adequately at the Tower retailer when I was there, but there was a lot of room for improvements. The consequences with the addition of used (or like-new) vinyl records into the retailing mix would have taken resources away from other aspects of the store's operations.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Please write a book.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay 3 วันที่ผ่านมา

      That's the funny thing about "the good old days." You never know they happened until they're over.

  • @bloqk16
    @bloqk16 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    Ah! That's marvelous about covering the aspect of the CDs being pricey, but they were cheap to produce.
    Some people I was acquainted with in the record business anecdotally informed me that based upon manufacturing cost for the CD, a record company, when subtracting the expense of marketing, could financially break-even after a quantity of 5K CDs were sold. That business model of low-volume sales/profits was based upon the record companies re-releasing 1960s ~ 70s albums on CDs in the 1990s.

    • @Attmay
      @Attmay 3 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I think the last time I actually went into a Tower Records was to buy a Peggy Lee CD in New York City a few months before 9/11. By that time, I was buying more reissues than new music by a wide margin. Unlike Rex Reed, I paid for my music.

  • @miket2646
    @miket2646 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +22

    I still believe that Bestbuy and Circuit City slaughtered all of the cd chains due to pricing. Same/better selection, tons of locations, significantly cheaper. Sam Goody, FyE, Tower, Blockbuster Music etc.

    • @PhilLesh69
      @PhilLesh69 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      In 1999 one of the cashiers at tower records in tysons corner Virginia told me about this new thing called mp3. That evening I started ripping my entire CD collection and tagging each track and scraping for album covers.
      And I ran an online cd store at the time.

    • @roaddawg3217
      @roaddawg3217 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      Yep, if I can buy everything you sell for 30% cheaper because I bought tons, I can sell it for 10% PM and run you right outta town 😂

    • @miket2646
      @miket2646 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@roaddawg3217 I worked for bestbuy over 20 years ago and they were very forward about using software as a way to get people into the stores. They knew that cds, games, and movies were the biggest purchases by quantity and that while you're there, you see all the other stuff for sale. So sure... they might only make $0.25 on selling you a CD.. but 20 CD's later, you just automatically show up at a bestbuy when your refrigerator breaks. Need a new computer? Brain goes straight to bestbuy because youre always there for music/movies etc.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      They did, and it was SO nice of Best Buy to NOW decide they don’t really want to sell media AFTER putting all the real media stores out of business. I hope Best Buy goes under now.

  • @Renovatio2
    @Renovatio2 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    In 2024 we still have those two Tower Records stores here in Dublin Ireland. They are awesome.

  • @KatAdVictoriam
    @KatAdVictoriam 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    I only just finished your Toys R US video and now you've given us this? My new favorite channel on YT. I love these deep dives in business/retail nostalgia. Thanks for the work you're doing!

  • @BrettShadow
    @BrettShadow 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    I hate walmart.... like... a lot... but they aren't responsible for the decline of any music/album retail stores. Walmart has always carried the censored/clean/radio edit versions of albums. So while they did sell some music obviously and they had some exclusive artists (Garth Brooks), their album sales didn't have a significant impact.

    • @gedaman
      @gedaman 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@BrettShadow It’s ironic now how you can buy the explicit version of albums at Walmart now, but only on vinyl which is expensive.

    • @BrettShadow
      @BrettShadow 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

      @@gedaman Wow I didn't know they finally started selling explicit. I think a lot of the initial decision to not sell explicit records was likely due to the original vision of Sam Walton. I don't know anything for a fact but I do know that Sam Walton was a very genuine and wholesome man. So I wouldn't be surprised if that decision wasn't made by the Walton's in accordance with Sam's moral vision for his stores if not even by Sam himself. I think the family has less control now than they have had historically so decisions like that are likely out of their hands at this point.

    • @gedaman
      @gedaman 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@BrettShadow I read in Rolling Stone a long time ago that it was Christian mothers or something that influenced Walmart to not allow explicit content album sales. K-Mart followed suit for the longest time until the early 2000s. I was surprised to find Jay-Z’s Vol. 2 Hard Knock Life on vinyl for sale at Walmart and see that giant parental advisory symbol on the corner along with Kendrick Lamar’s Good Kid Maad City and some other dirty rap albums like 2Pac’s Greatest Hits. Maybe they are allowing it since it’s vinyl and maybe there are no edited versions?

  • @dylives7667
    @dylives7667 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    50 thousand records used to be stocked there.
    Now it's a Supreme store.

  • @BiancaGreysin
    @BiancaGreysin 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    Vinyl actually wears out, just like cds, if you take care of it that yea it’ll last a long time but it’s not forever. I’ll also never forget the interview were Ozzy Osborne stated how much he hated vinyl and how much he thought it sounded like shit, he was like: “why is everyone buying them the quality is not good, you hipsters” 😂

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

      Huh!? How could Ozzy Osborne make such a statement about sound quality when considering his music career must have damaged his hearing.

  • @giorgioandmusic
    @giorgioandmusic 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    As a musician, this story hits home given that the circumstances that led to tower records downfall also led to a drastically different landscape for career musicians/artists. Nowadays, making good music isn’t the priority, it’s content/social media. I kinda wish Solomon was right and we’d still appreciate physical sales for music cus now we have a generation of insanely talented people making damn tik toks just to make money and pay the rent.

    • @nap871
      @nap871 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      What they call 70s classic rock will still be listened to in 250 years from now. It will age like classical music and stand the test of time. It's the only thing a a hand full off boomers got right.

  • @williamestes629
    @williamestes629 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    I prefer physical media over digital media because I see them as more reliable.

    • @CatFish107
      @CatFish107 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      The only way to sustainably maintain access to music is a captive breeding and training program for your personal live band.

  • @dravenlee4473
    @dravenlee4473 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +16

    I hated their prices but I loved shopping there every chance I could get. Sometimes technology sucks. There was something special about everyone going to a place for music to buy music. Also, less can be more. If you spent $18 on a CD, you are going to wear it out and appreciate it. Not just skip to the next song on your streaming service of millions of songs. At least vinyl and indie shops still exist.

  • @beezelite
    @beezelite 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    I built my life around collecting music and Tower was the place to do it. In NY there were 3
    stores well in reach and it was always an adventure. Worked there for a year too and that was a great situation with the discount. I love streaming and will purchase a physical copy of anything I like and can find.

  • @modravoda
    @modravoda 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    i don't miss physical media, but the tower records i used to go to was great. it had separate, and huge, sections for both jazz and classical. things i didn't know much about at the time, but wanted to. want a ring cycle conducted by solti? they had it. if you didn't know you wanted that, they'd tell you. want to get into jazz? rock up and say "i don't know anything about jazz, but want to. where should i start?" they guy walks down an aisle, grabs a compilation from Blue Note Records, and hands it over. want to go free form and say: "tell me something that if i don't know about i should stop everything i'm doing and listen to it" no matter whom you talked to, they'd give you at least three suggestions...and all of them were pretty great.

  • @Tieflingsbian
    @Tieflingsbian 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

    my uncle worked at the last/first tower records until it closed, until it became r5. i remember him talking about the closing. he really loved that job.

  • @pcs9518
    @pcs9518 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Most of my cds came from Tower Records. Until they closed it is where I bought them from exclusively.

  • @michaell8722
    @michaell8722 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Grew up blocks away from Tower theater, in the Land Park neighborhood, and remember walking to the theater, record and bookstore… unfortunately they didn’t adapt to the changing times..

  • @Slowleek
    @Slowleek 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +8

    Tower records was the best back in the day.

  • @sophist1cated
    @sophist1cated 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I expanded my musical horizon by far in the internet age. All those digital streaming services are a blessing opposite from physical media. Physical media in the 90s were expensive so only a limited amount of albums were purchased.

  • @pumpkinbread7182
    @pumpkinbread7182 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Grew up in Sacramento with Tower Records just a short bike ride away; it was almost a second home. Solomon was right…owning physical media is the better choice over digital subscriptions these days. And buying music at Walmart is just…weird.

  • @Trainfan1055Janathan
    @Trainfan1055Janathan 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    "No music, no life"? I hear that phrase a lot in Japanese songs. Is that a Tower Records reference?

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@Trainfan1055Janathan Yes, it was one of their slogans.

  • @vivangreco1710
    @vivangreco1710 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    This one really gets me. I really liked Tower. I spent way too much time and money there. Even as a big chain, it felt like a place that was about the love of music.

  • @johnmorrison5502
    @johnmorrison5502 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I lived right by Tower Cafe/Theater when Tower Records was closing down and he opened R5 records in the old Tower Records on that intersection across the street from Tower Cafe/Theater. My band played in there. He tried to keep the music going even in the end.

  • @Uncle_Smidge
    @Uncle_Smidge 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +9

    "Was it WaLmArT again?!" is such a mood in general

    • @danielcarlson800
      @danielcarlson800 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Willingly
      And
      Leisurely
      Making
      America
      Really
      Tacky

  • @c.7610
    @c.7610 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for this great video essay about Tower Records. I loved the footage inside a Tower Store in what looks to be about 1984! One thing I would like to add: Tower Records also had the best, most extensive classical section I’ve ever seen outside of actual classical specialty stores. I don’t know if this was true of all locations, but my local Tower’s classical section was in a big separate room where there was always an employee behind the counter who actually knew what they were talking about. I can’t honestly say that I miss Tower Records-hey, there are lots of places to buy music-but it was a great store, for a while.

  • @dallasguy3306
    @dallasguy3306 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Fairly new sub, liking your channel. We had an iconic Tower Records in Oak Lawn, a gayborhood in Dallas. Very nice, large store at the corner of Lemmon Ave. and Oak Lawn Ave. That corner has had numerous tenants who've come and gone. It's now a Verizon store.
    I liked the place because it had a massive jazz and classical music selection downstairs. Yes, upon entering you walked down, into a paradise of classical CDs. I had a Penguin Guide to Classical Music, a British outfit. Every month or so I'd go thru it looking for selections with "rosettes," the best stuff. More often than not, I walked out with at least one CD. I have an extensive collection, thanks to Tower Records of Dallas. My late mother started her jazz collection there. Great memories. Now I buy my Gen Z niece "new" releases of classic rock that cost $40+.

  • @hailmaryrecordings8255
    @hailmaryrecordings8255 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I worked at Tower Records in Reno Nevada in the mid-90’s and it was the perfect job for me at the time. I only left because I got a job in radio... Another dead format.
    Today’s young really missed an amazing time.

  • @MrMichaelbsmith6420
    @MrMichaelbsmith6420 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    No, the internet killed off slot of businesses that use to sell product like records tapes and cds, then music streaming took care of all that and that's one thing that made a record chain successful then, you could go into a location in your favorite mall and spend hours on end browsing while new releases were being played in order to get you to purchase or some had stations where you could pick from new releases and slip on headphones so you wouldn't be bothering others. As a teen I worked at a store called A&A records at the time KISS Destroyer was released in 1976 and I had to put up the main display for release day, this was when the group was just starting their climb to success after Alive the year before and just to be a part of that was one of the best memories I have to this day but now, that's something you don't have with music streaming and actually holding the record in your hands and reading liner notes on the album

  • @jhonwask
    @jhonwask 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I have loved records fo 55 years and will still keep buying them. Digital downloads are great for convenience, but they are not lasting. I like CD's and tapes, too but I would rather have the record. I went to the Tower in Manhattan a few times and it was a wonderful experience. I could find pop, rock, classical and whatever else. They had everything. If only they would bring back pre-recorded 1/4" open reel tapes, I'd be in heaven.

  • @stampscapes
    @stampscapes วันที่ผ่านมา

    Great vid. For a long time, going to Tower Sunset was like going to the music store Mecca. Spent a lot of late hours in their stores all around S. Calif as they closed at midnight.

  • @jeffbushway8228
    @jeffbushway8228 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Im really enjoying your business themed videos! can't wait to see more. thankyou for making them!

  • @JamesHenry-o8m
    @JamesHenry-o8m 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I even had been to the store in West Hollywood- that was quite a place to shop for records, because you never know what you might find....

  • @ALCO-C855-fan
    @ALCO-C855-fan 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +6

    2:24 - Dude looks like Moist Critical.❤

  • @Techpriest
    @Techpriest 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

    Minimum Advertised Price Policy (MAPP) is not illegal and is still commonly used in many scenarios today. It does not prohibit sellers from selling at lower prices, they're simply not allowed to advertise lower prices directly.

    • @gedaman
      @gedaman 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      I don’t get that. I remember in the late ‘90s the Sunday newspaper used to advertise new release CDs for $11.99 at Best Buy and Circuit City.

    • @Techpriest
      @Techpriest 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@gedaman MAPP is usually distributor specific and not universal. You can also break it, it's not illegal, it just means if you get caught they will either warn you or not sell to you, but you can still get it from other distributors.

  • @veronicamija4668
    @veronicamija4668 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I worked at Tower Records in Torrance Ca. In the ealy 2000s. It was the greatest time of my life.

  • @davidgonzales9039
    @davidgonzales9039 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I got 1 cd from Walmart in high school in the 90s. It was censored. That was the first and last cd I got from Walmart. RIP physical media.

  • @ChrisM-wq5us
    @ChrisM-wq5us 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The store in the thumbnail is the Carl Place store in Westbury, long Island NY. I use to shop there a lot. Miss my teen years.

  • @Tconlon251_2
    @Tconlon251_2 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I actually recognize the store in the thumbnail. I’m 99% sure it was in the Country Glen Center in Carle Place, NY. If you look on Google, most of the shopping center has been updated, except for the Guitar Center & PC Richard. For some reason, those 2 stores still have the same red & white facade from the ‘80s/‘90s

  • @JamesHenry-o8m
    @JamesHenry-o8m 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The first store they showed in color was the San Francisco location at Columbus and Bay. I used to go there all the time; boy do I miss tower records 😢😢😢😢😢

  • @flux1968
    @flux1968 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Even if Tower came back in a smaller form in the US selling vinyl, it wouldn't be the same. I was a teenager in NYC when the Tower opened on Broadway. It wasn't just a place to shop, we used to go and just hang out there - and there was no coffee bar either. It was a social gathering spot. A Tower store now selling vinyl would just be catering to a niche market. Tower online just misses the point.
    BTW, I worked at Tower Records on 66th and Broadway and Tower Video on 86th St. They were great places to work and helped educate me culturally.

  • @KeavyGoesLive
    @KeavyGoesLive 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    As a teen in the 90’s I could pay $17 for the new Alice In Chains CD at Tower, get it at Target for $13 or see if I could find a used copy at Dimple Records for $8-10
    This is why I would only shop at Tower when I got a gift card or the local radio DJ’s would sell their CD of parody songs as a fundraiser for the local children’s hospital.
    They honestly had an amazing collection of music but so did Dimple and Dimple had used CD’s and also had new and used movies, video games, comics, toys…

  • @johnrobinson5156
    @johnrobinson5156 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I recall the in-store Head Shop where smoking accessories, incense, lava lamps, black & strobe lights and posters of Farah Fawcett Majors were sold

  • @cnmathias5187
    @cnmathias5187 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    As someone who grew up in Sacramento, Tower Records was expensive but the Virgin Megastore at the theatre building at Arden Fair Mall was more expensive.

  • @roymoxley2587
    @roymoxley2587 6 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    If you don’t own physical media You own nothing Period .

  • @ALCO-C855-fan
    @ALCO-C855-fan 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +5

    17:39 - YEEEEE-HAAAAAA!!!!!!! That's what I wanna hear!

  • @DubbPP
    @DubbPP 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I remember having my friends tell me my cd was in tower records and walmart... then walking in tower records and walmart and seeing it for myself

  • @anthonyamato6367
    @anthonyamato6367 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Billy Corgan put up a Tower Records storefront at his tea shop for the 30th anniversary of Siamese Dream in 2023. They had bags and tshirts etc it was pretty cool.

  • @monaural2.988
    @monaural2.988 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    When discussing Tower records, do NOT blame the internet or Napster for its downfall. The fact of the matter is that Russ Solomon came out more of a carefree party dude counting bucks rather than a carefully forward-thinking leader. Too many stores in too many regions, and paying 20 bucks for any given CD gets old quickly.

  • @adamwalcott_official
    @adamwalcott_official 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Interesting video! I lived in Tokyo for a year in the late 90s and the Shibuya Tower Records, which still exists, was the most amazing store I'd ever seen. Coincidentally, I moved to Tokyo from Folsom CA, and the high school I attended was literally across the street from the Folsom Dimple Records, where I purchased Evil Empire the day it came out.

  • @gabetrain8834
    @gabetrain8834 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Yet another great case of the internet being an idea that wasn’t thought out well at all. Physical media will always be more safe than anything digital. And it’s always there when you need it.

    • @sendthis9480
      @sendthis9480 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +3

      lol…I don’t know about all that.
      I had my case logic book of 200+ cds stolen from my car 5-6 different times.
      Nobody has ever stolen my Spotify.

    • @TheMediaHoarder
      @TheMediaHoarder 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@sendthis9480That’s why you keep CD-R copies in the car and keep the real ones at home!

    • @CatFish107
      @CatFish107 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      Digital is fine, provided you hold the copy, maintain backups, and don't have any drm baggage. All the music I make is recorded and stored digitally. Occasionally I'll bounce it to tape for playback in the car, but I'm in no fear of losing my recordings.

    • @gabetrain8834
      @gabetrain8834 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      @@CatFish107 I don’t think you get the point. Digital isn’t physical. Unless it IS on a dvd, cd, usb flash drive, or external hard drive separate from a computer or phone, it is too easy to lose.
      Physical means you HAVE to be there to steal it, and it’s harder to do than something digital. And the whole car thing I’m tired of hearing. Cars easily can have stuff stolen from them nowadays or even themselves stolen. Everyone knows that now

  • @DylanPorto45
    @DylanPorto45 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    this is to serve as a reminder that if a company can survive after being fined/paying settlements, they weren’t fined enough.

  • @BiroZombie
    @BiroZombie 2 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Tower Records was my go-to spot for buying CDs. If I was looking for some rare album, no matter how obscure, they always had it.

  • @SmithCommaBenjamin
    @SmithCommaBenjamin 7 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The record labels' greed destroyed more than album sales

  • @giovannisynthesis
    @giovannisynthesis 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    When you stream you only stream the same albums. Sometimes you forget those awesome bands you used to listen to.
    Physical CDs triggers old memories when you see them and open the album.

  • @JohnSegerclucka
    @JohnSegerclucka 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    Disc rot is exaggerated. Out of the hundreds of CDs I have purchased since the 1980s, I've never had one that rotted

    • @roderickcortez138
      @roderickcortez138 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      Seriously. I have CDs that I bought back in the mid 90's and they still play perfectly.

  • @rabblerouser5559
    @rabblerouser5559 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Internet piracy drove business to the record stores at the turn of the century. Something the music industry never understood, but the original Napster was like a souped-up mix-tape that nerds shared and turned people on to bands they’d never heard. Then my 15 year old self went to the store and bought the actual albums. Napster sold me as many albums as main stream radio did in those days.

  • @khiclark31
    @khiclark31 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +2

    I miss Tower Records. Mine was in Philly.

  • @vinylordie1301
    @vinylordie1301 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I only got to experience Tower at the end of their reign, but they had a great location in Nashville. I’m sad Mr Solomon didn’t live to see the fully realized vinyl resurgence. I loved my CDs, and I loved my iPod when it was gifted to me, but I love no format more than vinyl records… Like you said, they are forever. 🖤

  • @chazer793
    @chazer793 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Actually, CDs are starting to make a bit of a comeback too. My DJ daughter was telling me about it just yesterday.

  • @princesskristan
    @princesskristan 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The Tower Records by my house was turned into a CPK but I loved going there as a kid. I still have my DVD copy of The Wiz that my mom got me as a surprise

  • @Spanishfutbol2010
    @Spanishfutbol2010 9 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I genuinely loved tower records both for nostalgia and the people who worked there. It was a breath of fresh air talking to people who knew music and were down to earth folks as opposed to the bitter socially awkward sheeps they employ at Walmart and for that reason I’d gladly pay more going to Tower records than go to Walmart

  • @williamkeiser7562
    @williamkeiser7562 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I know exactly where that landmark is in Sacramento every time. A friend and I used to go down there to go to all the dimple records once a week from Stockton. Dimples is now also sadly dead though. One of their locations was pretty much next to it. The tower records we had in Stockton where I grew up also became a Rasputin's when tower records died which was practically the same store.

  • @charleshays5407
    @charleshays5407 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Going to Tower Records was like a religious experience, and living in Los Angeles, the store in West Hollywood was like going to church.

  • @timinthe704
    @timinthe704 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    The first Tower Records I visited was in DC in Summer 1989. While attending a Navy public health "C School" in Oakland CA from mid Jan to 31JUL1993, I found a Tower Records on Market St. in SF, the other store on Broadway to a bit too far off the beaten path. Likewise upon returning stateside back to the SF Bay area from Japan, I picked up continuing upgrading my music collection and the musical gurus must have heard my wishes as there now two music outlets that I could frequent without having to take a taxi...that was Virgin Records MegaStore near Union Square in SF. Just hop in the MUNI and a few stops, a short walk in either direction, there was music heaven so to speak. Thus, whether stationed in the SF Bay Area, the Seattle area or San Diego, Chicago, not so much in NC after returning to my home state after retiring from the Navy in the mid Spring 2004, though there was one or two in Atlanta, but I only made it there as the company was liquidating. Glad to know that Tower Records now has a web store, so I have to check that out for sure. Perhaps, Tower Records will become a proverbial Phoenix rising from the flames. Great memories nonetheless.

  • @bokesnmokes
    @bokesnmokes 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I spent so many happy hours at Tower Records in Honolulu in the 80s but I got hooked on Jelly’s in the 90s. Tower just got so expensive!

  • @davidgarris2513
    @davidgarris2513 10 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I was floor manager of the World Music Section at the Woodfield Schaumburg Illinois location back in the mid 90's. Great times. Great people. .,... David Jonathan Garris Esquire Ret Warner Bros 🐾🐾🐕

  • @djk2884
    @djk2884 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Thank you for the great history of Tower Records. Very much enjoyed the video.

  • @frostlord1246
    @frostlord1246 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +7

    How convenient that you bring up the resurgence of physical media just days after Concorde announced it's servers getting shut down. Arguably one of the biggest blunders for digital media so far.

    • @alexhajnal107
      @alexhajnal107 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +4

      Who?

    • @dylives7667
      @dylives7667 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      You couldn't have chosen a worst example.
      Delete and retry.

  • @Marchant2
    @Marchant2 8 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I miss the old way of obtaining music. You appreciated it more because you not only owned it, but no one could ever take away your vinyl or CDs. I have Apple Music streaming, but that doesn't excite me nearly as much as going to a record store and spending as long as I wanted browsing the music to find a gem that I could own forever. Now, if Apple removes a song or an artist from their playlist, it disappears from my library. Forever.

  • @Thomas-yr9ln
    @Thomas-yr9ln 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I never bought records when I was a teenager I couldn't afford it. My parents give me 20 dollars a week allowance. I needed that candy and Pepsi.

    • @bloqk16
      @bloqk16 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

      When I worked at Tower in the late 1970s, it amazed me about how 10 ~ 15 year old kids had 20 dollar bills to buy the KISS Double-Platinum album, as that would be equivalent to nearly $140 in today's dollars. Imagine giving a kid $140 for an allowance nowadays.

  • @jordanwilliams9300
    @jordanwilliams9300 8 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    They'll have to pry my CD collection out of my cold, dead fingers 😂

  • @lucasdude
    @lucasdude 11 วันที่ผ่านมา

    grew up in the sacramento area & used to go to the watt & sunrise stores a lot. really hope they can re-open some stores in the future

  • @gokhanersan8561
    @gokhanersan8561 7 วันที่ผ่านมา

    A newly released CD in 2004 was around 35 bucks inflation adjusted. Tower records finally installed a previewing machine -with a huge catalog- in their stores that made one’s investment a bit more secure. It was too late. Customers had already vanished. They folded within a year. Too bad.

  • @secretsquirrelz
    @secretsquirrelz 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    The times.... they are a'changin though. Physical media is going to be back full-force in ten years. People are so , so, soooooo incredibly sick of subscriptions.

  • @kriscynical
    @kriscynical 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I miss music stores. We had a Camelot and Sam Goody in our mall once upon a time, and a stand alone Blockbuster Music which was _fantastic._ They were the first place I ever encountered listening stations to preview an album before buying it.

  • @rubshandswithdelight
    @rubshandswithdelight วันที่ผ่านมา

    Tapes did not replace vinyl; That was taken over by CD's. Small size, compact, and no concerns with warp/scratches.

  • @redcat9436
    @redcat9436 10 วันที่ผ่านมา

    I never had much luck finding anything at Tower. Indie stores were always my source for imports and bootlegs.

  • @ArchiesMom518
    @ArchiesMom518 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    I honestly love and I'm kind of surprised by the fact that Tower Records tried to adapt with the times, instead of making the same mistake that I hear in a lot of these videos that I watch. You got Toys R Us that did it but they did it a little bit too late, you have Kmart that outright refused and then killed its own self and also Circuit City. But those are just the ones that I've watched recently

    • @DiamondKingStudios
      @DiamondKingStudios 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      I think this story is better than the others for their attempts to adapt. There isn’t as much incompetence one can pin on the company’s leaders.

    • @ArchiesMom518
      @ArchiesMom518 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

      @@DiamondKingStudios I agree, and the fact that he stayed with It Up Until the End was amazing. I mean with the digital media boom there's really nothing anybody could have done to fight it but I think this is the only one I've seen where the owner came back and was like, yeah I was wrong dude

  • @Simple_Jack82
    @Simple_Jack82 9 วันที่ผ่านมา

    Tower was one of the best f9r variety and obscure finds. The prices on the other hand were always significantly higher than Warehouse and Sam Goode

  • @WobblesandBean
    @WobblesandBean วันที่ผ่านมา

    I miss Tower Records. That place was where little baby me had my goth and punk awakening at the tender age of 12.

  • @frankyjas5184
    @frankyjas5184 11 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Lol. I been watching this dude come up. He kills it with these docs. Good for you dude.

  • @Mustkillmachine
    @Mustkillmachine 5 วันที่ผ่านมา +1

    Tower records was my favorite job I would totally take a pay cut to work at one again I hope they come back