Sunday, July 31, 2011

Independent Retailers’ Open Letter to Jay-Z and Kanye West About ‘Watch the Throne’ Exclusive

July 28, 2011


By (independent retailers)

In response to Jay-Z and Kanye West’s decision to offer exclusive sales programs to iTunes and Best Buy for their forthcoming “Watch the Throne” LP, a number of independent retailers have written an open letter to the duo protesting the plan, calling it a “short-sighted strategy.

Dear Jay-Z and Kanye West,

Independent record stores serve our communities. Our passion is music, and we convey this to the millions of customers who come to our stores. That’s what we do.

Four years ago independent music stores across the country banded together to create Record Store Day. Our goal was to counter the negative media coverage about the supposed demise of record stores brought on by the closing of the Tower stores and to respond to the music business practices that fans deemed to be manipulative and onerous.

We reached out to the artist community to see if they would join us, and the response was overwhelming, with words of support coming in from Paul McCartney, Erykah Badu, Tom Waits, Chuck D, the Foo Fighters and countless others. Working with their label partners, many of these musicians created limited edition works of art, including vinyl and CDs made especially for music-specialty retail. Hundreds of these artists took the opportunity to perform, DJ, and interact with their fans in our record stores. Here in the U.S., Record Store Day lifted the entire music business by 8% and contributed to the growth in music sales. Record Store Day is now one of the biggest music events in history, with millions of people participating worldwide. We also continue to work throughout the year with labels, artists and managers and run regular promotions via physical independent retail and recordstoreday.com.

We are responding to the bad news that your new album will not be available to independent record stores until after iTunes gets a window of exclusivity. We also learned that the deluxe version (which is what the true music fans who shop our stores will want, by an overwhelming majority) will only be available at Best Buy exclusively for a period of time. We believe this is a short-sighted strategy, and that your decisions will be doing great damage to over 1,700 independent record stores — stores that have supported you and your music for years.

We know that you are busy, and that you put most of your energies into creating great music, but we are writing to you in the hope that you will hear us and take the time to rectify this matter. As representatives of the independent record store music community, we are asking you to allow record stores and music fans equal access to your new album.

With the utmost respect,

Dedry Jones, The Music Experience
Mike Dreese, Newbury Comics
Judy Negley, Independent Records
Rachelle Friedman, J&R Music World
Mike Batt, Silver Platters


John Kunz, Waterloo Records
Tobago Benito, DBS Sounds
Brian Faber, Zia Records
Karen Pearson, Amoeba Music
Bryan Burkert, The Sound Garden
Paul Epstein, Twist and Shout
Mike Wise, Monster
Rob Roth, Vintage Vinyl
Karl Groeger, Looney Tunes
Joe Nardone, Jr., Gallery of Sound
Jonathan Fernandez, Rasputin Music
Mike Fratt, Homers
Dilyn Radakovitz, Dimple Records
Lisa Teger-Zhen, Uncle Sam’s Music
Dustin Hansen, Graywhale Entertainment
Bill Kennedy, BK Music
Jim Bland and Bob Schick, Plan Nine
Steve Wilson, Kiefs
Tom King, Central Square Records
Alayna Hill Alderman, Richard Storms, Record Archive
Nancy Salzer, Salzer’s Records
Rick Ziegler, Indy CD
Laura, Finders Records
Deon Borchard, Nic Fritze, The Long Ear
Chuck Oken, Rhino /Mad Platter
Allan Miller, John Bevis, Disc Exchange
Charlotte Kubat, Magnolia Thunderpussy
Chris Avino, Rainbow Records
Rich Koch, Off the Record
Skip Hermans, Skip’s Record and CD World
Jason Patton, Oz Music
Quinn Bishop, Cactus Records
John Timmons, ear X tacy
Lou Russell, Lou’s Records
Roger Weiss, Streetlight Records
Terry Currier, Music Millenium
Andrew Chinnici, Lakeshore Record Exchange
Michael Bunnell, The Record Exchange



Mike White, Boo Boo Records



Steve Baron, CD Central



Eric Levin, Criminal Records



Pat O’connor, Culture Clash



Dan Plunkett, End Of An Ear



Paula Kret, Exile On Main St



Chris Penn, Good Records



Doyle Davis, Grimey’s



Travis Searle, Guestroom Records



Jim Mcguinn, Hot Poop



Isaac Slusarenko, Jackpot Records



Jason Nickey & Heath Byers, Landlocked Music



Todd Robinson, Luna Music



Darren & Jim Blase, Shake It



Anna & Chris Brozek, Slowtrain



Kimber Lanning, Stinkweeds



Tom “Papa” Ray, Vintage Vinyl



Jack Dennis and Christopher Ashely, Earshot



Lisa Tiger-Zhen, Uncle Sams



Dave Zero, Mad City Music Exchange



Sarah Hefte, Everyday Music



Mike Madrigale, Mr. Suit Records

Lance Price, CD Source



Bruce Carlock, Cats Music



Thomas “Toonz” Predovich, Vinyl Solution Records



Neal Becton, Som Records



Marc Lasky, Music Box



Ryan Shoemaker, Galaxy CDs



John Thominet, Rainbow Records



Rick Linie, Creative Leisure



Chris, Young Ones



Morrison Agen, Neat Neat Neat Records and Music



Peter Gianakopoulos, The Old School Records



Reid Robinson, Co-Op Records, Moline



Carol Copfer, Movie Trading Company, Vintage Stock



John Anderson, Reverberation Vinyl



Rob Kimple, Ramalama Records



Randy Wagner, Radio KAOS Records



Sam Lock, CD.Game Exchange



Rob Bourqu, Music Matters



Steve Hyland, Down In the Valley



Melanie Cade, Mojo Books and Music



Tony Cicalese, We Got The Beats



Andy Schneidkraut, Albums on the Hill



Robert Stapleton, Southwest Sound



Sharon & Shirley Bechor, Rock and Soul Records



Rich and Sue Graves, Budget Tapes & Records



Todd Fundaro, Flipside Records



Adam Hirzel, Saki Records



Kelly, Patrick and Robby, Back Door Records



Stacey Pepper, Vertigo Music



Josh Castleberry, Toxic Beauty Records





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