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All Things Must Pass The Rise And Fall Of Tower... -

By the 1970s and 80s, the Tower on Sunset Strip became the epicenter of the industry. It wasn't just a store; it was a clubhouse. It was where Elton John would show up at opening to buy stacks of vinyl and where aspiring musicians worked the registers. Tower succeeded because it felt authentic. It prioritized "cool" over corporate rigidity, allowing individual store managers to curate their own stock, which created a sense of discovery that an algorithm can't replicate. The Peak and the Blind Spot

The collapse of Tower Records was not caused by a single factor, but a "perfect storm" of three major forces: All Things Must Pass The Rise and Fall of Tower...

Retailers like Best Buy and Walmart began using CDs as "loss leaders," selling them below cost to lure customers into stores, making Tower’s premium prices look unsustainable. By the 1970s and 80s, the Tower on

Ultimately, All Things Must Pass reminds us that while the medium of music changes, the human desire for a "tribe" remains. Tower didn't just sell plastic discs; it sold a sense of belonging. Tower succeeded because it felt authentic