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Russ Solomon passes at 92


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dies at 92 while drinking whiskey and watching the Oscars...that's up there with having your heart give out while watching/laughing at a vaudeville act on the Jimmy Dorsey show!

one way or another, the SOB got enough of my money that I don't feel obligated to say RIP or whatever.

and I'd do it all again.

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4 minutes ago, JSngry said:

dies at 92 while drinking whiskey and watching the Oscars...that's up there with having your heart give out while watching/laughing at a vaudeville act on the Jimmy Dorsey show!

one way or another, the SOB got enough of my money that I don't feel obligated to say RIP or whatever.

and I'd do it all again.

AmenĀ ....

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Damn. I enjoyed spending lots of time and money in the 2 big NYC Towers (Village and Lincoln Center). The Village location had an annex that sold books and cutout CDs, as I remember; Lincoln Center had incredible classical/opera inventory, and also a bookstore. (My memories of the bookstores are foggy because there were many preferable booksellers in Manhattan). I even blew a lot of money at the (Yonkers? southern part of NYS 100 shopping strip) Westchester branch.

It was clear that the chain overexpanded, and the sea changes in music preferences/distribution ensured there'd be no recovery.

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  • 2 weeks later...

I have a different perspective, since I worked at J&R (a competitor, though we came first in NYC) for many years. Ā Towerā€™s prices were much higher than ours. Ā I also thought our selection was better, and our cutout selection was much better. Ā The one area they excelled in was Japanese imports, because they could bring in stock from their Japan operation.

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I remember going into Tower Records in New York City and picked up a number of releasably priced Japanese jazz reissues, but there overall selection didn't blow me away compared to what Peaches had in a typical Southeastern store when they first opened in the mid-1970s. I think I only made it to J&R once and I can't remember what I bought there, but I doubt that I left empty-handed.

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18 hours ago, sgcim said:

I remember walking into the Village Tower one afternoon, intending to spend an hour or so looking at records, and walking out of there about midnight, completely disoriented.Ā 

I can relate to this, not just at Tower, but every time I went to a good record store that was more deeply stocked than the last good record store. So much music...

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Tower, Picadilly Circus in London is still badly missed. All time greatest visit there must have been mid/late 90s when they had all of the Jazz 625 releases on video, the early Miles Davis Columbia CD sets, a whole bay of Japanese imports. I ended up purchasing the Coltrane Atlantic vinyl box that day. Having said that, the Tower US prices worked out quite a bit cheaper ($ for Ā£ effectively).

RIP.

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Tower, Piccadilly Circus opened until midnight for some time so you could leave a gig and head down there to stock upon whoever had just impressed. Also, more worryingly you could do the same after an evening in a central London pub - great fun but invariably an expensive exercise especially in the cold light of the next morning!

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