Tower Records is going…
Dave Winer was just telling Patrick about going into a Tower Records recently as they are holding a going-out-of-business sale and noticing that only three people were there. I remember when I was a kid people would line up around the block to get into Tower Record in Campbell and buy records. Seriously. I also remember when they got their first CDs back when I was in high school. Patrick, of course, lives in a different world. He buys his music on iTunes.
Here’s a picture I took of Adam Curry and Dawn and Drew inside Tower Records in Mountain View, CA in 2004 after BloggerCon that year. That’s now only a memory. Tower Records is no more…

Powered By
October 22nd, 2006 at 2:48 pm
Do you think the adventure of music buying will be lost because of services like iTunes? When I was a young punk I’d read the ‘thank you’ list of bands I liked (these lists were printed on lyric sheet inserts in the records).
If a band I liked thanked another band I hadn’t heard of, I’d seek out that record at whatever store deigned to carry strange, outsider punk rock music. I don’t know if this can happen in iTunes.
BTW, the first CD I bought (Fugazi’s 13 Songs compilation - even though I already had the orignal EPs) was at Tower.
October 22nd, 2006 at 3:12 pm
Love Adam’s boots. Ouch! I’d hate to have that immortalized.
October 22nd, 2006 at 3:36 pm
Itunes only
I hope his backup’s are good.
October 22nd, 2006 at 4:06 pm
I read about in the local newspaper here:
http://andy.gamerscircle.org/2006/10/07/sacramento-based-tower-records-going-out-of-business/
October 22nd, 2006 at 4:55 pm
When I lived outside London, I bought hundreds of CD’s at their Piccadilly store. A great shop. A great big shop with clerks and customers who really knew their music. iTunes is no substitute.
October 22nd, 2006 at 5:51 pm
The Tower Records and Books at the corner of San Antonio and El Camino was a great place. I’ve been in others, but none lived up to that combo.
October 22nd, 2006 at 7:09 pm
Orcmid: that’s where I took that photo of Adam Curry.
October 22nd, 2006 at 10:42 pm
iTunes has both ’similar too’ and ‘influenced by’ listings for most of its music listings, Brooklyn. There is an ‘also bought’ list that shows what people who like that artist are also buying. Pretty thorough, really.
As for backup, there is now automatic backup within iTunes for hard drives. One can also backup digital content by ripping it to CDs. Not to mention being able to duplicate the same iTunes library to more than one computer.
I think the last time I went into a Tower was about three years ago. It was at a mall I had gone to for the Office Depot in Portland.
October 23rd, 2006 at 10:11 am
[...] Lots of people are mentioning the pending demise of Tower Records. [...]
October 23rd, 2006 at 1:11 pm
The trouble is, even with their huge liquidation sale, their CD prices are still higher than Amazon (and most other retailers). There was a time when TR was extremely competitive, no idea who’s bright idea it was to jack up the prices, but that was pretty much the nail in their coffin.
Agreed - it’s a sad loss. Tower was always one of those “dangerous places” where I would go in looking for one CD and come out with 10.
October 23rd, 2006 at 2:41 pm
wow, never saw that picture of us with adam, thanks for sharing robert!
i went into a tower records in chicago about a week ago and it was so weird since i hadn’t been in a music store since that picture was taken after bloggercon. i just don’t need them anymore since i too buy my music off itunes.
October 23rd, 2006 at 4:20 pm
it’s their own damn fault. in-store coffee bars saved
the bookstores, encouraging people to hang there even
if they didn’t come to buy a book, which they eventually
do…
tower could’ve done something simialr to just get
people in the store… live music, USB kiosks with
complementary songs… there was SO MANY THINGS they
coulda done…
dammit.
October 31st, 2006 at 11:16 am
how true how true this last comment was. Tower refused to evolve-they just chose to raise their prices higher and higher and higher-as much as i love their selection-good bye Tower-it was your own fault.
November 6th, 2006 at 4:40 pm
The comments are spot on. The current sale prices are 30% of all DVDs and CDs (latin and hip-hop are 40% off). 30% off a $12.99 disc is a solid deal but most of the newer releases are $18.99.
Tower’s greatness lay in its diverse selection and its staff of music lovers. Amazon covered the former advantage and the latter was never able to make up for the lack of innovation and the higher than the internet prices.