My tolerance for Record Store Day (RSD) is getting less and
less as each year passes. What started out with good intentions has turned into
a Frankenstein’s monster. Who wins in this one day, free for all folly of low supply/high
demand? It sure isn’t the dedicated music buyer. It definitely
isn’t the eBay buyer, aka also a consumer or customer of said goods. I suppose
you could say the stores come out on top (which is good) but, sadly, the true
moneymakers are the eBay flippers. Those who either camp out in front of a
store or pay someone to do so for them and just stock up on the rarest of the
rare and turn it over immediately. Many RSD releases will sell for hundreds of
dollars that day and then go down in value to a more reasonable price just days
later (mostly but not all).
Stores are beholden to a strict Record Store Day policy that
makes online auctioning, price mark ups, early sales, etc. illegal. If stores
are caught in the act, they will be blacklisted by the RSD organization, taken
off the official list of participating stores and will no longer receive the
exclusive stock of RSD releases going forward. So, while stores do enjoy more
traffic and sales on RSD, their day is mostly spent either selling to horrible
people whose goal is to feed off of obsessed record collectors or, in turn, to
tell the stores usual clientele they no longer have the item they’re looking
for. Yes, this gives the stores a profit of a few bucks for each record they
sell but it really pales in comparison to the hundred dollar plus profits that
can be made online that very same day.
Why do items go for this price? Well, just take a popular
band and press 1,000 copies of an exclusive album for worldwide sale and then
only place a handful of them in each participating store that has lines around
the block before opening. That’s an equation that results in disappointment for
the majority of fans of that band, for the regular customers of said store and
for humanity in general. Simultaneously, the low life who couldn’t give a shit
about music or the store it’s being purchased from can walk away with that
release and all the other hardest to find items. Sure, you can make the
argument that the same music fans waiting in line are also the ones buying the
eBay items from these soul-sucking jerks but I can’t blame them. They just want
the music and are willing to go to extremes to get it. It really is ridiculous
that these fans and music buyers are the ones being exploited not only by the
eBay sellers but also by the Record Store Day organization itself. These fans
are the ones who support these bands, these labels and these stores year round
and just not on one made up capitalist holiday in April. It’s time for the RSD
company to wake up and stop with the ridiculous limited edition aspect of all
their titles. If it’s customers they want and not circling vultures, then up
the supply and allow the stores to sell to their customer base and to any new
customer who walks in for the first time. After all, isn’t that what this whole
day is about- buying records at a physical brick and mortar store and not
online like everybody does the other 364 days of the year.
Record Store Day is now something completely different than
it was that first year of it’s existence. It’s time for the RSD organization to
reassess its goals and point for existing. Without fail, every year the number
of release goes up and the number of each pressed goes down. What is the point
of this exploitation? This premeditated and falsely created demand only feeds
secondary markets with the physical stores just acting as the supply house for
astronomic online sales. Just something to think about, that’s all and remember
only 11 months and half months to the next Record Store Day…
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