Ehwmatt wrote:But anyway, I bolded your "half price" argument because I don't agree with it. In general, they are not stocking Best Buy shelves with $17-18 CDs anymore. They've realized they can't get away with it any more, no one's buying.
Not any more...the retailers, lead by best buy, have started to take a cut...in order to compete...as the record companies wont cut their margins.
This is precisely what destroyed Tower Records. Tower used to regularly sell CDs at 18-19 bucks. When Best Buy came around, they couldn't afford to take a hit to their prices, because their cost structure wouldn't allow it. BOOM --- no more tower records. Fuck em anyway, they didn't deserve to stick around.
As for the Half price comment. The standard price for a best buy CD, not on sale or reduced to spur on x-mas purchasing....is 15.99. Half of 15.99 is 8 bucks. Sure I'm doing some rounding here....but the fact remains that half of 15.99 is pretty damn close.
If you want to take issue with me using 1/2, how about 40%? 40% accounts for a significant and material difference.
Are you going to argue over the language I use or whether or not the gyst of what I'm driving at is acurate enough to suggest there's a difference. I'll submit, that it really doesn't matter.
It's enough of a difference to cast reasonable doubt as to whether or not Revelation, regularly priced at 15.99, could have realized north of 500k units. It's not too difficult to suggest it wouldn't have sold nearly as many units....
Rockindeano wrote:strangegrey wrote:Rockindeano wrote:Red13JoePa wrote:You (and I) would have been all for the certification if Revelation had been fronted by Augeri Frank.
LOL, it never would have gotten there if Arnel hadn't fronted it.
It is impossible to make that statement. For all you or anyone else knows, Arnel is no different a factor in this equation than Augeri or JSS. Which is my whole point of contention here....
Yeah, I can't prove that an Arnel fronted album would have sold a lot more than an Augeri one, but look at the dynamics in play here. Journey did something unusual and sensational, in getting a singer, a foreign singer no less, via the internet! That has never before been done. The press, either printed or television, picked it up and gave it legs in the form of attention. That attention led to some shedded light onto the band, who previously was in the cold stoned darkness. No one outside MR or Jackasstalk knew Journey was even around. The Arnel hiring, which I still think was a good hire(the guy is great), was instrumental in getting that thing to sell at all, and then when people did actually hear the voice and the semi similar sounds to Perry, they hammed it up. Without an sensationalized hiring of Pineda, this thing doesn't see gold.
Totally agree with you Dean...as I agree that the promotion of Arnel's story helped sales as much as promoting the record itself. I will submit that this sorta 'hype' doesn't last very long. The next record, if there is one...will be *very* telling.