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Farewell to HMV


Al Krow

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HMV, even back in the day, always seemed to be well behind the curve and it was never a go to location when I was still buying CDs or DVDs.  They'd always seemed to be too mainstream and didn't really do that particularly well.

While I should feel concerned about the death of the high street, insofar as HMV goes, I'm indifferent.  There's nowt specialist about them; Amazon do the same product, for cheaper and with next day delivery.  Why would I ever schlep into town to buy from them?

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The trouble I've always found with HMV, and this is going back a few years but into the Internet buying era, is that a bands current CD was a normal price, tenner-ish, but any of their older cd's were through the roof pricewise, where other retailers sold most older cd's for less than the current release. 

There's been quite a few artists I've got into and bought their back catalogue on the Internet, mainly amazon if cheap enough new or ebay second hand. A few times I have bought a back catalogue for £30 where in HMV it would've been a couple of hundred. 

I've been in there and seen a CD for £17.99 and gone on Amazon while in HMV and bought it for £4.

It's sad but I've had no reason to use HMV for a long time, and I don't do streaming preferring to own the physical item. 

Edited by Maude
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I haven’t been in a HMV for years, until about 5 months ago. They didn’t have what I wanted and there was nobody to ask for help, so I left.

- as an aside, it’s a shame for the staff. It really is. And having had mates in a similar position, I wouldn’t wish it upon anyone - especially not in January when everyone decides they’re going to look for a new job...

count my blessings I got out of retail. it’s a dying industry 

Edited by AndyTravis
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Seems like the general consensus is "ah well, bit of a shame, but not going to effect me personally very much".

Browsing through hundreds of different albums is not something we want to find the time to do anymore.

It is amazing to have an unlimited world of music available for almost no cost (Spotify, YouTube etc), I can't deny that.

Waterstones have thrived in the internet age. But then a physical book still beats a kindle hands down in a way that a CD doesn't give you anything more than streamed music.

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What with streaming these days ,cd and DVD are a sinking ship ,but vinyls have gone up in sales  ,who even uses money these days it's all PayPal and the like ? Feel sorry for all those people who are going to lose their jobs ,blade runner springs too mind enjoy the journey folks it about to get a whole lot weirder

Edited by kevvo66
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