Freddy58 said:
MajorFubar said:
More proof of the fact was the proliferation of cheap soundalike LPs on labels like Hallmark (Top of the Pops) and Stereo Gold Award (12 Tops). As a kid in the 70s my record collection was full of them because original LPs by the original artists were darn expensive!
Hence the importance at that time, of singles. 3 minutes of vinyl magic
My uncle had a record shop and I worked there from age 14 until I left Uni. For most of the 60s and early 70s singles were 6/8d, ie 3 for a £1, and albums were about 32/6d, ie about £1.63. That was an awful lot of money back then and most young people bought singles. Retailer margins were very high. I was lucky enough to be able to get all my music at cost but even so an album was an investment.
Now CDs are really very cheap, well classical ones are, unless you want something special that's no longer being made. Moreover there are lots of re-releases of high-quality performances and recordings at very low prices. For example the "Mercury Living Presence" box of 50 CDs costs about £75, so roughly £1.50 per CD. I buy most of my CDs from Amazon as there are now no shops in Birmingham with anything like a decent selection of classical CDs.
Chris
PS I agree with Matthew that Gramophone is much better under its new ownership. I've even bought a subscription! Haymarket nearly killed it but I hope enough people sign up to keep it going as it is back to what it did best, serious reviews. Andrew's equipment section is good too with more in-depth reviews then you get here.