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Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



I think, if Big Music is to ever save itself, it will eventually get out of the manufactured-CD business except for huge hits sold at Wal-Mart and the equiv. in other countries. Niche-market stuff like Classical and Jazz will be sold as downloadable digital files. Now, the key question is -- what's the profitable play? I think the copyright owners should sell CD-quality (or better) downloads directly to the public, at $1 per song or $10 per album, and include downloads of printable, high resolution graphics so those so inclined can burn and make art for a close proximity of a real CD. Amazon is already driving down the price of lossy-format, low-quality downloads and I can see these settling at 25-50 cents per song or about $5 or less per album, which is more of a reasonable price (although I still wouldn't pay my own money for low-grade lossy formats of anything that sounds the least bit decent). Thus iTunes and Amazon can fight over the commodity price of lossy formats and the copyright owners could retain the full-quality market and price it to be profitable (if they can make money off $15 CD's, with manufacturing infrastructure having to be supported, distribution networks taking a cut and retailers taking a cut, surely they can make more money at $10 downloads sold right to the public -- if not, they will never have a viable business model).

If I were making strategic decisions for a large copyright holder, I would begin now by de-leveraging my manufacturing and distribution assets. The thinking is -- let 3rd parties hold the real estate, labor costs and capital of production plants and warehouses and contract-manufacture the few dozen titles a year that will sell enough copies to justify distribution thru the Wal-Marts of the world. Everything else (and I do mean _everything_ that's in the vaults) would be sold direct-to-consumer as downloads. The revenue structure changes to more of a annuity than quarterly quests for hits, so perhaps this business model is not what Wall Street would prefer, at first. But, over time, if it's run right, the revenue stream starts to resemble a utility company and such things as reliable dividends can be set up and thus the stock becomes a good long-term play. The key thing Wall Street has to get out of its system is the myth that the music business is wildly profitable -- it's not and it never has been. Hits are a fluke, slow-building revenue over time is the rule, especially with niche genres like classical and jazz. With popular music, the profitability of mega-hits is eroded by all the misses in a catalog each year.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Abrams" <steve.abrams@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 8:30 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



When I tried ordering from Archiv a few years ago they were not sending anything abroad.

I have found that I can frequently obtain CDs from Amazon.Com at better prices than ordering from the UK.

For example, the most recent Living Stereo SACDs are 11.98 USD, with several a dollars less and older items at less than 9 USD. Shipping to the UK is 3 USD. Most items can be bought new at lower prices from associate sellers. By contrast the price for recent issues from Amazon UK is 13.99 GBP plus 1.24 GBP shipping. That is the equivalent of 30.5 USD, nearly three times the price. The records sold by Amazon UK are pressed in Europe. Also shipping from America is almost as fast as from the UK.

UK prices do include 17.5 per cent "purchase tax."

Buying records directly in the UK I have had the best luck with a firm called Crotchet, who also send records abroad. Otherwise I buy directly from companies such as Symposium and Preiser. I have also had good luck dealing directly (by email) with Bongiovanni in Italy.

Steve Abrams


----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Thursday, July 17, 2008 12:31 AM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



You are correct, some of the newer ArkivCD's do indeed have full booklets. But the Mercury were in the original ArkivCD series and unless they started reproducing the booklets somewhere along the lines, they did not as of a year or so ago.

As for shipping to Europe, I wonder if that has to do with specific ArkivCD license agreements -- were you ordering a BMG/Sony title the time you had trouble?

Here in the states, I've had generally good luck tracking down "new and used" options on Amazon for out-of-print classical stuff, but not always. Some titles are ridiculously expensive used and one then wonders what genius bean-counter at Big Music Co X decided to take it out of print if it obviously is still in demand enough to command high prices used. But many other titles can be had cheaper than original street prices, sometimes still shrink-wrapped. There are a few companies, Newbury Comics, ImportCD's, etc, that must have bought out inventory from dead record-store chains at pennies on the dollar and can now sell out-of-print but still shrinkwrapped titles for $5-8 each. For instance, I was able to get several titles from the original RCA Living Stereo reissue CD's that are now out of print but never issued on hybrid SACD's for a few bucks each, still new in the wrapping and not RCA Music Club editions. Same with several of the late 90's Decca Originals reissues.

None of this is to cast any aspersions on ArkivCD -- those guys are doing a great service to music and music fans.

-- Tom Fine


----- Original Message ----- From: "Steve Abrams" <steve.abrams@xxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 6:56 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



Some Arkiv reissues are now being produced with booklets. I just purchased my first Arkiv edition - the RCA transfer of the 1947 recording of "Four Saints in Three Acts". This CD was never available in Europe, so far as I know, and has become quite difficult to find second hand.
The transfer is excellent and the 32 page booklet with Gertrude Stein's libretto is included.


There was no problem ordering from the UK. Some time back when I tried ordering from Arkiv they would not sent stuff abroad.

SA TTTTTTT

----- Original Message ----- From: "Tom Fine" <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 10:39 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



The ArkivCD's should be CDR "clones" of now-out-of-catalog CD's. I tried a couple and they sound fine to my ears, keeping in mind that CDR media can be more fragile than manufactured CD's. Too bad they don't reproduce the booklets, which were sweated over profusely. Since Universal chose to take so much of the catalog out of print, this is the only way to hear a lot of this material if you missed the original CD's. Arkiv does a nice job keeping the brand alive. By the way, they have also reissued a bunch of other Universal material, particularly Decca and DGG. And they have a bunch of EMI and Sony/BMG reissues out there also. I think the ArkivCD program is now well north of 2000 titles.

-- Tom Fine

----- Original Message ----- From: "Roderic G Stephens" <savecal@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
To: <ARSCLIST@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>
Sent: Wednesday, July 16, 2008 12:06 PM
Subject: Re: [ARSCLIST] Wonderful Mercury Reissues



Hi All,

I've been very pleased with my Arkiv CD purchases in
the past, but I thought you all should know about the
Mercuries that are being reissued by the label, and
I'd be interested in any comments regarding them by
Tom Fine.

This is from an email I just received from them:

"It's been an audiophile extravaganza this month at
ArkivMusic, with our sales on the fabulous BIS label
from Sweden (lots of titles back in stock!) and the
RCA Classic Film Scores series (my favorites this week
are the film scores for Errol Flynn and the Prince
Valiant Suite from Franz Waxman).
We round out the month with one of the most
fascinating audiophile labels of all, Mercury Living
Presence. Mercury was a special label in many ways, an
American company, from the heyday of classical
recording in the U.S., that reproduced some of the
most sonically realistic sounds at the dawn of the
stereo era. Precious few stereo LPs were pressed when
these recordings were issued, and they became some of
the rarest and most collectible classical discs ever.
ArkivMusic has now reissued over 60 releases from the
Mercury catalog, all of which are on sale for a
limited time."

Rod Stephens





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