MOG MOG

WHERE MUSIC IS WORTH MORE THAN MONEY

Album: Return To Cookie Mountain, Blood Mountain

With all the posts about Tower closing, I read a lot of complaints about not knowing where to buy CDs. Yet people are still managing to keep buying them. And why not? They're still a better value than downloading for $1/song. You get full uncompressed fidelity in case you want the full experience on nice headphones or a good stereo, and even if you mostly use the ripped files, they're much more reliable backup storage than disk drives, which have nearly 100% failure rate within five years. CD sales may be down 10%, but what articles fail to mention is that more than that percentage are the blockbusters. Mariah Carey are Justin Timberlake (and in turn, record company execs and shareholders) are making millions instead of tens of millions. Who gives a rat's ass. According to most of the indie labels I've read about, sales are actually up.

So step gingerly into the 21st century, and order online. It's okay, really. I've been doing it for 12 years, and no one has hijacked my credit card number (seemingly a big fear among some lingering luddites). CDNow was the first major online CD store, starting up way back in 1994. It had good prices and had almost everything. My site was even an affiliate. Unfortunately Amazon consumed them. Then Alldirect.com was the place to go for the best prices and deep catalog, until it went out of business last summer. Now I go to Deep Discount. It has free shipping, but started charging tax recently. Their catalog has improved a lot. Just to compare it to a few other online stores, I looked up a list of new releases and reissues, and a couple hard to find items, some that I recently bought, a couple that I'm looking to buy. As long as you know where to go for what, you can find almost anything. It seems anything that's supposedly out of print is still available in Germany or Japan (see Streetwalkers' Red Card, 10cc's Original Soundtrack, Sly & the Family Stone's Small Talk and La Dusseldorf). You just have to really want 'em, since they're at import prices. If not, I think it's perfectly acceptable to find a free download and wait until they're available for reasonable prices. Happy shopping, kiddies!

$ = lowest price (Prices listed already include tax and shipping, so don't add what I have in the parentheses. When the same shipping price is listed for each CD, it varies according to how many CDs are ordered).

Deep Discount CD $ TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain, $9.87 (.60 tax) $ Mastodon - Blood Mountain, $11.86 (.87 tax) The Pretenders [Deluxe Edition dbl CD], $20.90 (1.42 tax) $ Talking Heads - Remain In Light [Dualdisc Remaster], $14.99 (1.02 tax) $ Can - Ege Bamyasi, $14.25 (.96 tax) Amon Duul II - Yeti, $14.25 (.96 tax)

CD Universe TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain, $10.79 (1.00 shipping) Mastodon - Blood Mountain, $17.69 (1.00 shipping) $ The Pretenders [Deluxe Edition dbl CD], $18.49 (1.00 shipping) Talking Heads - Remain In Light [Dualdisc Remaster], $17.05 (1.00 shipping) Can - Ege Bamyasi, $14.89 (1.00 shipping) Amon Duul II - Yeti, $14.69 (1.00 shipping) Streetwalkers - Red Card, $16.95 (1.00 shipping) 10cc - Original Soundtrack, $20.99 (1.00 shipping)

Amazon (There's a sale on free shipping, so I couldn't calculate what it normally is) TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain, $10.99 Mastodon - Blood Mountain, $13.98 The Pretenders [Deluxe Edition dbl CD], $20.99 Talking Heads - Remain In Light [Dualdisc Remaster], $18.98 Can - Ege Bamyasi, $14.99 Amon Duul II - Yeti, $17.98 Streetwalkers - Red Card, $24.49 Rico - Man From Wareika, $34.49

Insound TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain, $12.74 (.75 shipping) Mastodon - Blood Mountain, $17.74 (.75 shipping) Talking Heads - Remain In Light [Dualdisc Remaster], $18.78 (.75 shipping) Can - Ege Bamyasi, $17.74 (.75 shipping) Streetwalkers - Red Card, $24.02 (.75 shipping) 10cc - Original Soundtrack, $21.27 (.75 shipping)

Aquarius Records has a tiny store in San Francisco, but their online stock is great, and their main selling point is their expertise and reviews, particularly in psych and metal. For that service they're worth spending a little more on now and then.

TV On The Radio - Return to Cookie Mountain, $14.37 (1.63 shipping) Can - Ege Bamyasi, $18.61 (1.63 shipping) Amon Duul II - Yeti, $18.61 (1.63 shipping) La Dusseldorf, $24.63 (1.63 shipping)

Wayside Music is a fabulous specialty store for more avant garde releases. I got all my Heldon CDs there, and as you can see, they have a ton of Krautrock.

Can - Ege Bamyasi, $17.83 (.83 shipping) $ Amon Duul II - Yeti, $11.83 (.83 shipping) $ La Dusseldorf, $20.83 (.83 shipping)

Dusty Groove has a really nice selection of soul, hip hop, African, Brazilian and reggae. When they have it, their import prices beat everyone's. I bought most of their Island Japan series (Rico, Justin Hinds, Ijahman) for $20 each. Prices went up, but elsewhere they're over $35.

$ Sly & the Family Stone - Small Talk, 21.79 (1.80 tax) $ Lenine - In Cite - Au Vivo, $17.43 (1.44 tax) $ Rico - Man From Wareika, $25.06 (2.07 tax)

Imports The last couple imports I ordered were the early UK release of Return to Cookie Mountain and Razorlight in July, for which I paid about $15 USD each with free shipping at CD Wow!. Great deal, considering they're over $30 at Tower and Virgin. Unfortunately the exchange rate has been sucky for the past three years, otherwise they'd be even cheaper. The Ideal Copy offers imports at near-domestic price and shipping rates. They specialize in punk, post-punk and new wave. Amazon.co.uk has better selection and decent prices, but pricey shipping. Siren Disc is another option. For hard to find and out of print CDs, Gemm and Music Stack. And Ernie B's for reggae.

Used CDs I check online to see what my local Reckless has in stock. I'd say they have what I want about 20% of the time. Spun.com used to be great for both selling and buying, but they never have anything in stock anymore, and the prices are high and buys too low. For six years I used Djangos -- I could sell my used CDs at a nearby affiliate, 2nd Hand Tunes and use the credit for used CDs. They had a handy email notification feature when used CDs became available, though you have to act quick on hotly contested ones. However, I've been replacing a lot of my old CDs with recent reissued remasters, and while Djangos distinguishes them on their site, they seem to be incapable of actually shipping the right versions. I've received nearly a dozen wrong items in the past year. I finally gave them a well-deserved sarcastic crack about dyslexia when they sent me House Full: Live at the Troubadour instead of Fairport Conventions's Full House, and they threatened to suspend my account (after spending literally thousands of dollars on them in a half dozen years). Be my guest, assholes. Rather than address the problems, they simply said their failure percentage is acceptable. I've had problems not receiving items from Amazon Marketplace, and they don't make it easy to get a refund. I haven't really found a consistent alternative other than a pilgrimage to the San Francisco Amoeba (go online Amoeba, or open a store in Chicago, please!). In addition to Gemm and Music Stack, there's Half.com, now owned by eBay, and Second Spin, which works just like Spun, but the selection doesn't seem much better.

Posted on 10/16/2006
Tags: online cd shopping
Comments
lemontwist says:

Thanks for this handy reference guide! :)

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nicki says:

Priceless advice. Thanks for taking the time to put this together.

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man you dont know how awesome your timing was on this...i just lost my laptop a couple days ago and am trying to rebuild the nothingness of my music collection, thanks!

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terese says:

it's like consumer reports, but for MOG.

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Kid Charming says:

Also, many more artists/labels are offering direct online ordering these days.

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ivylander says:

I've also had luck in the past with Caravan Music, a Brazilian-Latin specialist based in Austin. Once a boxed set I ordered was delayed, and in the interim the price dropped by five bucks. When I pointed this out, they honored the lower price instantly.

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joshuaseth says:

great rundown, glad to see all these spots in one post...

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Nice. Also, I've just been waiting for a post to thank you for recommending "In the Aeroplane Over the Sea." I purchased it not long after you mentioned it in the dbboucher contest thing, and I saw it mentioned a few times after that. It is one of only two albums for which I have rolled the dice (not very expensive dice, at eMusic), and all I can really say right now is, uh...holy crap. Albums like that don't come along too very often.

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david hyman says:

wow. nice.

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SWozniak says:

This is awesome. I shall be using it.

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tomiiko says:

Deep Discount looks like the shizz. Why didn't you tell me of this before?

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vacasmagras says:

Dusty Grooves is a super choice. They ship really quickly and have a selection of music you won't really be able to find anywhere else (in the US).

For European releases that are very expensive on Amazon or just not available. I go to boomkat. They also ship very quickly and reliably.

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fastnbulbous says:

I forgot about Boomkat. Good site -- I read their reviews now and then, but have never ordered anything. It's more electronic-dance oriented. I checked, and they have the single by my favorite Iceland band, Ampop, but not their new album. Drat, no one is carrying it right now. Rough Trade used to.

Alldirect.com was better than Deepdiscount. That's why I didn't mention Deep until after Alldirect closed. With shipping it was slightly cheaper. With free shipping on $100 orders, it was WAY cheaper. I got my books and music probably at cost sometimes. Probably why they went out of business.

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1234chainsaw says:

Man, I miss Alldirect. I used them for years and always wondered how come they were still able to stay in business. For a fairly deep catalogue and prices that are comparable to Deepdiscount's, try CDconnection.com. (E.g., the Damned's import 5CD live record box Noise, Noise, Noise was $23.84. It goes for GBP13.99 minus VAT at Amazon.co.uk.) CDconnection charges shipping, but the charge was reasonable the one time I've tried them. Sales tax for CA residents, though. Thanks for pointing out The Ideal Copy.

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