Y'know, I think Russ Solomon had it under control with Tower for most of the run---he actually outlasted 'em all.
The Eucalyptus story is pretty grim, Peaches was in Chapter 11 by 1981, and the Wherehouse absolutely overextended themselves by getting into video rentals and software sales. Musicland swallowed Licorice Pizza in '85 and the stores they didn't close were re-branded as Sam Goody.
But then, just as those guys died off, Virgin Megastores came along and I think Russ and Richard Branson got into a bit of a manhood-measuring contest.
If Russ had stayed in California, Nevada and Arizona, or even just in the U.S., I think he'd have been okay. But Tower started globe-trotting---Argentina, Canada, Hong Kong, Ireland, Israel, Japan, Mexico, the Philippines, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand and the UK.
All this at a time when margins were getting slimmer and the music business was changing.
Branson was built for that kind of stuff. Russ, who was a lovely guy, was a kid from Sacramento who really wasn't.
T-Palette Records | TheAudioDB.com
Music Label: T-Palette Records, data, artwork, logo, fanart, clearart, charts
Tower Records Shibuya - Shibuya, Tokyo
An eclectic range of CDs and books to suit anyone's taste can be found at Tower Records Shibuya
T-Palette Records - Wikipedia
Here’s one where Tower Records somehow managed to remain a household name in Japan. Yes Tower Records is not the top brand name in the United States anymore but in Japan the company is known to be holding the contracts of some of the pop stars in that country as a music label and that there’s a Tower Records store in that country that managed to be one of the attractions in Tokyo.
‘The Last Blockbuster’ documentary, about Bend video store, is coming to Netflix in ‘an ironic twist of fate’
"The Last Blockbuster" documentary explores how, among other things, the Blockbuster company passed up a chance to purchase Netflix. Now, the movie is coming to the streaming giant.
This is like when Blockbuster is a tourist attraction in Bend, Oregon when it used to be a major video store chain in the 1990’s.






