Wow! You mean I was paying nearly $7.50 for those singles I only listened to one side of? What a rip-off!
Think of it in relation to the minimum wage.
In 1959, a 45 was a buck. That is what the minimum wage was, too.
Wow! You mean I was paying nearly $7.50 for those singles I only listened to one side of? What a rip-off!
In 1959, a 45 was a buck. That is what the minimum wage was, too.
Of course, a year later I was getting promo copies...
The resale of promo copies became an issue in the 70s. Record labels started making the promo copy stamp larger with warnings for resale. They even cracked down on some retailers and used record stores for trafficking in stolen goods.
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I should have been more clear. I didn’t buy promo copies.
The resale of promo copies became an issue in the 70s. Record labels started making the promo copy stamp larger with warnings for resale. They even cracked down on some retailers and used record stores for trafficking in stolen goods.
Home taping led to the record industry lobbying Congress to impose a blank tape tax. When it came time for the digital royalty, the record industry imposed rules in the DMCA that prevented satellite or internet broadcasters from promoting the airplay of songs or artists, with the hope of preventing listeners from recording songs. So announcers are not allowed to say "Coming up the new song by Justin Bieber" or "We'll play Beyonce's new album in its entirety." They can only play two songs by specific artists, not entire albums. They must get advance permission if they want to do a tribute show to an artist.
Did I mention that is highly annoying?
"The White Album" was $11.98 and I paid that amount! So that would be what, $100 or so, in today's money?Exactly. $8.99 in 1980 dollars adjusted for inflation is----$28.36.
And given that the reissues are on much higher-quality vinyl than 40 years ago and there aren't the economies of producing them in huge quantities, the new price is actually a little less, adjusted.
(P.S.: Records have ALWAYS been expensive. Go back to the good old days of $4.98 for a stereo LP. That was 1968. That's $37.20 in today's money.
Here are the Sirius song announce rules:
"There can be no “prior announcement of titles of the specific sound recordings.” This means that there can be no advance run down of titles and artists for music coming up. You can do one or the other. Never both."
It sounds to me like they're breaking the rules. But it may be part of the game they play.
Here are the Sirius song announce rules:
"There can be no “prior announcement of titles of the specific sound recordings.” This means that there can be no advance run down of titles and artists for music coming up. You can do one or the other. Never both."
It sounds to me like they're breaking the rules. But it may be part of the game they play.
Incidentally, every announcer on Symphony Hall will run down the composers and compositions coming up in the next hour from time to time. But they never mention the performers! That may be the key to SXM's lawyers' argument if anyone ever calls them on it.
"The White Album" was $11.98 and I paid that amount! So that would be what, $100 or so, in today's money?
Thank you, my original thought was about $90 but I thought I'd go wide. I didn't know the equation.$89.48, Semoochie.
Thank you, my original thought was about $90 but I thought I'd go wide. I didn't know the equation.
OK Michael, you're not as smart as I thought you were. Are you happy now?Semoochie: You think I could do the math? I'm flattered.
No, there are a few online calculators, fed by the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. This one's good if you're just doing broad year-to-year comparisons:
https://www.usinflationcalculator.com/
But if you want to get it down to exact months, this is the one:
https://www.bls.gov/data/inflation_calculator.htm
OK Michael, you're not as smart as I thought you were. Are you happy now?On the other hand, my original guess was off by 52 cents!
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