For many people, this time of year
signals a new beginning – a time to look back at their perceived mistakes of
the previous year and make life changes for the upcoming year. Personally, I have never been one for New
Year’s resolutions. If I discover a way
to make my life better, I normally implement the change regardless of the
calendar date.
However, in the spirit of
the occasion, I’ve decided to partake in the tradition this year. Actually, that’s not completely true. To be perfectly honest, I made a startling
discovery while I was doing research for this very blog. I was looking at a list of the top albums of
2015 when I realized that I didn’t own any of them. That discovery prompted the question, “Just
what did I buy this past year?” Turns
out, every CD I bought in 2015 was a so-called “catalog album” – an album that
has already charted and then fallen off the charts. I didn’t buy a single “new” album in
2015. That hasn’t happened since
1981. My streak began when I purchased
Queen’s “Hot Space” in 1982. The flood
gates didn’t truly open until 1983, though.
That’s when I joined the Columbia Record & Tape Club.
For those of you who don’t remember,
Columbia House (as it was called) was a mail-order music service that offered
an insane number of albums or tapes for a penny with the signed agreement that
you would purchase a specified number at “regular club price” within a certain
period of time (usually 3 years). The
deal I signed with Columbia House was what they called a “trial
membership”. I got eight albums for a
penny and only had to buy 3 more at regular club prices within the next 3
years. The problem was that I entered
into this agreement without my mom’s consent…and she was not happy about it. She told me horror stories of how her sister
had signed a similar deal years earlier and was then forced to purchase
merchandise she had not ordered. She was
convinced I was about to share the same fate.
Actually, when I think back on it, there’s probably very little chance
they could have held me to the terms of the agreement anyway. I’m pretty certain that no company is legally
permitted to enter into any kind of signed agreement with a little kid.
Nevertheless, I fulfilled my end of the
deal and, in retrospect, cannot even imagine how my aunt wound up in such a
living nightmare with these guys. I
mean, all you had to do was return the cards on time to avoid receiving
unwanted albums. She must have been a
real moron to screw that up. Actually,
she WAS a real moron…but I digress.
The Columbia deal came along at a time
when I was just starting my music collection.
I had discovered a lot of new
music in a short period of time and was able to acquire a large number of albums
(cassettes, actually) virtually overnight.
I can still remember the eight tapes that I received:
Michael Jackson
– Thriller
Men At Work –
Business As Usual
Def Leppard -
Pyromania
Toto IV
Van Halen –
Diver Down
Hank Williams,
Jr. – Greatest Hits
Billy Squier –
Emotions In Motion
Devo – Oh No, It’s Devo
Devo – Oh No, It’s Devo
Looking back, I had pretty good taste
in music for a little kid. I still have
seven of those in my current CD collection.
Boy, did that Devo album suck, though.
What the hell was I thinking there?
But again, I digress.
A few days ago, a good friend of mine
(thanks, Paul) posted a link to an exciting story on my Facebook wall. It seems that a half decade after
closing its doors, Columbia House is again dipping its feet into the mail-order
music business.
While
their initial business plan is geared toward the resurgence in vinyl records,
one can only hope that CD’s won’t be far behind if all goes well. If so, I think it’s safe to say that I will
not only be updating my music collection with a number of new releases in 2016
(my resolution), I will be doing so under a number of aliases from a number of
addresses. I will also be hitting YOU up
to join in order to get the four free selections for the referral. YOU HAVE BEEN WARNED.
NOTE: The original account of this story was taken
from: "Michael Jackson Got Me on Coke"
I was a "double-dipper." I belonged to both the Columbia AND the RCA Record Club. Everything from Mathis to Mancini. The Brits quickly set me right a little further on down the road.
ReplyDeleteI joined RCA (later known as BMG) several times, too. :-)
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