The CBC is reporting that the UK head office of HMV is mulling selling off the Canadian branch of the HMV chain. In Canada, HMV is one of the last of the big national chains dedicated to just CDs/DVDs and games. (As opposed to places like Best Buy that include them in sections, with CD sections becoming tinier by the week, it seems.)
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2011/03/25/hmv-canada-sale.html
Doesn't mean a sale will happen. They could just decide to shut them all down. Or they'll get bought by Game Stop or something and change focus. I was actually surprised to read this because I always thought HMV Canada was a separate entity anyway - like BBC America being separate from the main BBC. The fact HMV in the UK is in trouble is worth noting beyond Canada, too - I hadn't heard that until now.
I usually get flamed for my views regarding the value of actual "brick and mortar" stores, and actual physical permanent media, so I'll refrain from editorializing further on that point (other than to say since I entered my 40s I have rapidly seen my world shrinking as more places I go to in order to get me out of the house disappear; I expect to be in full-fledged hermit mode by the time I'm 47).
One of the user comments really annoyed me, though - a guy saying something to the effect "good riddance" because all the CDs he buys he can get for cheaper at Costco (a membership-based discount superstore chain). Which is great if your interest in music begins and ends with Lady Gaga. But I'll never see a Laurie Anderson or Imelda May or Residents or Jeff Beck or Aphex Twin CD at f-ing Costco. HMV is one of the last remaining places in Canada where you can actually expect to find this stuff on the shelves. I've often found CDs and DVDs at HMV that I can't even order through Amazon, and a few years ago they brought back an idea the late, lamented A&B Sound chain had and added small book sections (real books that you'll still be able to read 5 years from now without having to renew the lease). And in my personal experience I find HMV tends to hire people who don't give you a blank stare when you ask if they carry a certain Jeff Beck CD or a DVD of a movie made before 2004 (I honestly have encountered this at places like Best Buy).
As the news story says, HMV head office hasn't made any decisions, and may do something else entirely, but I definitely see this as the bell tolling. I'll have to make plans to travel to the big HMV at West Edmonton Mall (the best-stocked location of the chain outside the UK, in my opinion) before long.
Alex
http://www.cbc.ca/news/business/story/2011/03/25/hmv-canada-sale.html
Doesn't mean a sale will happen. They could just decide to shut them all down. Or they'll get bought by Game Stop or something and change focus. I was actually surprised to read this because I always thought HMV Canada was a separate entity anyway - like BBC America being separate from the main BBC. The fact HMV in the UK is in trouble is worth noting beyond Canada, too - I hadn't heard that until now.
I usually get flamed for my views regarding the value of actual "brick and mortar" stores, and actual physical permanent media, so I'll refrain from editorializing further on that point (other than to say since I entered my 40s I have rapidly seen my world shrinking as more places I go to in order to get me out of the house disappear; I expect to be in full-fledged hermit mode by the time I'm 47).
One of the user comments really annoyed me, though - a guy saying something to the effect "good riddance" because all the CDs he buys he can get for cheaper at Costco (a membership-based discount superstore chain). Which is great if your interest in music begins and ends with Lady Gaga. But I'll never see a Laurie Anderson or Imelda May or Residents or Jeff Beck or Aphex Twin CD at f-ing Costco. HMV is one of the last remaining places in Canada where you can actually expect to find this stuff on the shelves. I've often found CDs and DVDs at HMV that I can't even order through Amazon, and a few years ago they brought back an idea the late, lamented A&B Sound chain had and added small book sections (real books that you'll still be able to read 5 years from now without having to renew the lease). And in my personal experience I find HMV tends to hire people who don't give you a blank stare when you ask if they carry a certain Jeff Beck CD or a DVD of a movie made before 2004 (I honestly have encountered this at places like Best Buy).
As the news story says, HMV head office hasn't made any decisions, and may do something else entirely, but I definitely see this as the bell tolling. I'll have to make plans to travel to the big HMV at West Edmonton Mall (the best-stocked location of the chain outside the UK, in my opinion) before long.
Alex