
Doug Blackburn
The Noisy Audiophile
April 1997
More About Buying New CDs for the Price of
Used CDs 
Since the last CD club installment I've received several
EMAILs from people with feedback and info that are worth sharing
with you to further enhance your CD Club experience. In addition,
I rejoined Columbia House recently making extensive use of their
web site. So here are some things that came from SoundStage!
readers and some things I've discovered since the first
installment: 
    - If you get tired of mailing back selection cards every
        month, you can request being put on a 'no card to return'
        service. Here you order what you want, when you want it.
        You have to have completed your enrollment agreement to
        be able to do this. Some clubs may have 'rules' about who
        qualifies for this kind of membership (minimum annual
        number of CDs purchased or something like that). I'm not
        too crazy about this option though. I'd rather just quit
        then wait for the attractive "We wish you would
        rejoin" offers because these are often better than
        the 'public' offers in advertisements. 
         
    - You can reply to the monthly mailings via the clubs' web
        pages, saving the cost of a stamp every month. 
         
    - If you get a monthly mailing and the offer is not good
        enough (I recently got one from Columbia House, 'buy 1
        get 2 at 75% off', forget about it, not a good deal at
        all), SAVE the booklet for another month or two when the
        offer is better and order the CDs from the older booklet.
        This definitely works. This lets you maximize the good
        CDs you get and maximizes your opportunity to get the
        best prices for every CD you order. 
         
    - If you use the club's web page, you can order ANY CD in
        their database on any selection card you return to them.
        So if you get a monthly mailing with a 'buy 1 get 3 free'
        offer, you can order CDs from any booklet you got in the
        mail and you can order any CD the club carries from their
        web page database. Very cool. 
         
    - If you are joining a CD club... you are not restricted to
        the titles that appear in the advertisement. You can
        order any title in the club's web page database as part
        of your initial order. I recently did this with Columbia
        House and it worked like a charm. 
         
    - I am beginning to suspect that Columbia House gets more
        CDs direct from the original recording label than BMG
        does. This is because Columbia House CDs are packaged
        more like the original CDs more often than BMG's CDs. For
        example: Lou Reeds 'Set the Twilight Reeling' has a
        unique dark dark blue jewel case. The Columbia House Lou
        Reed CD comes with that dark blue jewel case. Neil
        Young's Mirror Ball came in a cardboard sleeve in stores,
        but the BMG Club version was in a standard clear jewel
        case. Likewise, Columbia House CDs that came from their
        original record company with special tinted CD carriers
        come with those same colored tinted CD carriers, like the
        orange one used on Dada's 'American Highway Flower'. 
         
    - One correspondent noted that BMG Classical CDs do not
        sound as good as store bought copies of the same CDs. I
        have to admit to finding BMG Classical CDs to sound very
        uninvolving also. But I have never had an opportunity to
        compare BMG versions directly to commercial versions.
        Note that there is variation in commercial versions too.
        I have multiple copies of several CDs and it is just as
        common for them to sound different as it is for them to
        sound the same. I do not get the same sense than BMG
        pop/rock/etc CDs do not sound as good as originals. I
        have done some comparisons of several random titles and
        find the BMGs sound the same most of the time. When they
        don't sound the same, it's a tossup as to which one
        sounds best, sometimes the store copy, sometimes the BMG
        copy. 
         
    - Columbia House's web page is working now, apparently,
        mostly... there were some problems in January and
        February, but it seems to have settled down to a great
        extent at www.columbiahouse.com. You can find CDs by
        category, title, artist, or alphabetically. Columbia
        House wisely crosses over many titles into multiple
        categories. For example: Los Lobos appear in adult
        alternative, rock, and Latin/Tejano. 
         
    - Best intro offer seen from Columbia House recently : 12
        Free now (no shipping charges), buy 1 more for $6.95 now
        and get 2 more Free now. Total of 15 CDs for a total cost
        of $15 ($6.95 plus tax and shipping/handling on 3 CDs).
        Membership obligation is to buy 4 more CDs at full price
        within 2 years. Of course if you buy those full price CDs
        when the sale offer is 'buy 1 get 3 free' or 'buy 1 get 2
        free' you get more free CDs when you buy the 4 required
        to fulfill your membership. In the end, you have 27 to 31
        CDs for about $113 to $123, $3.65 to $3.95 each (plus
        some sales tax). Not bad for CDs a bit more identical to
        what you buy in stores. BMG's prices are only a tiny bit
        lower for a similar number of CDs built around a BMG
        introductory offer. The Columbia House web page can be
        used to join but you get 11 CDs Free instead of 12. I did
        not notice if you could reduce the number of full price
        CDs you have to buy later buy one if you buy 1 more now
        for 1/2 price (plus 2! more free). You also pay shipp ing
        on the web site's intro offer which increases the cost of
        each 'free' CD by about $2.25. 
         
    - Using Columbia House's web site, you can purchase CDs if
        you live in the U.S., Canada and Mexico. 
 
Enjoy your cheap CDs! 
...Doug Blackburn
Doug.Blackburn@Tanet.com
Click here for Doug Blackburn's previous
article: New CDs for the Price of Used CDs