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Music CD Distribution Expands To Salvation Army

January 19, 2011

I don’t go to my local Salvation Army store out of economic desperation. I want to make that clear, but I am a Salvation Army regular.

Since I got married in 2005, I’ve been carting carloads of household goods and other items, including never-used electronics, to the store in a never-ending quest to consolidate the belongings of two households into one.

When I walk in, it’s like Norm walking into Cheers.

After unloading my car, I usually take a leisurely walk around the “media aisles” in search of some old vinyl to expand my grandfather’s Caruso collection, fill in a few gaps in my LP collection, and surprise myself with some oddball finds, like Vaughn Meader’s 1962 “The First Family” comedy album, which spoofed President John F. Kennedy and family.

Usually, the vinyl is near a stack of prerecorded audio cassette tapes and VHS tapes, but last week, a few dozen CDs appeared for sale for the first time.

My find indicates that the end of the music CD could be closer than we think. It also indicates that the end of physical music media might also be close at hand.

When 8-track tapes were sold at Salvation Army stores and flea markets, it was to make way for the prerecorded analog cassette. When cassettes appeared at the Salvation Army, it was to make way for CDs. But with used CDs now on sale at the Salvation Army for 25 cents, it’s to make way for digital downloads.

Once CDs are gone from the Salvation Army, there will be no mainstream physical music media to replace them, and in the future, there will be one less reason to linger in the store.

Posted by Joseph Palenchar on January 19, 2011 | Comments (3)

April 18, 2012
In response to: Music CD Distribution Expands To Salvation Army
Addun commented:

I've been to Salvation Army thrift steros and I've seen plenty of religious tracts, Bibles, etc., so this doesn't shock me.On the other hand, in the depressed urban community where I live, there just aren't many other places helping the poor in the way the Salvation Army helps arranging emergency shelter and food, running afterschool programs for youth, etc.For instance, I watched the video, and it suggests I donate to Doctors Without Borders well, in small working-class towns in , we don't see Doctors Without Borders, but we do see the local Sallie Ann whenever someone's house burns down.Although the international Salvation Army may be run a bunch of right-wingers, I have never seen our local Salvation Army insist that someone convert to evangelical Christianity before providing them with help. I'm not saying it doesn't happen somewhere, but it doesn't happen here.Just my two cents.


January 20, 2011
In response to: Music CD Distribution Expands To Salvation Army
billbob commented:

I have been buying CD’s from thrift stores for years. I have gotten some amazing music over that time. The pickings do seem to be getting better, but it isn’t a “new” trend.


January 20, 2011
In response to: Music CD Distribution Expands To Salvation Army
Joe Palenchar commented:

One update:
Another sign of CD's demise is the planned closing of Sony's Pitman, N.J., CD-manufacturing plant by the end of March. Sony's remaining CD-manufacturing plant in the U.S. is in Indiana.

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