2023 was in some key respects, a replay of 2022. Last year I was busy from March until the end of the year [and beyond] on household upgrades and projects that took large amounts of time and money. This year was initially set up to be very different but in March, again, everything changed. That’s when my wife and I found out about Nits50, the 50th anniversary Nits concert in Amsterdam and being enamored of Nits’ music for ages, we had to go. After all, With their studio burning d0wn last year and lead singer/guitarist Henk Hofstede’s diagnosis of myasthenia gravis coming down at the nearly same time, the thought was: it’s now or never.
So we committed to a big three week vacation in Europe and the UK. We are spending a week in Amsterdam on a houseboat. Then some time in Wales, visiting with Gavin Brick, who has been a regular here in the comments for some years. Then on to London-to-Paris to see Pina Bausch’s Tanz Wuppertal company present “Mambo” in the City of Lights. I will hopefully get to meet as many of my UK friends that I can and Gavin and his partner will be accompanying us [as well as old friend chasinvictoria – he’s also a Nits fan!] to Amsterdam since he has family there and is now keen to see Nits after his kinfolk as well as we told him about the wonder of the Nits. And chasinvictoria and I are Nits fans down to Ron Kane appleseeding us with music in the last 40 years. So it’s all wonderfully circular.
But it will cost a bundle. After forming our plans, we resolved to sell off lots of things from our collections to help fund this grand excursion: antiques, music posters, and actual discs in the Record Cell are all on the chopping block! Actually, I had needed to thin out the Record Cell by at least 20% simply to bring it down to a manageable size, but now the import is even greater!
The corollary to saving for a trip was, of course, not spending money on music! Which has been my goal that has been more or less met over the last few years. At my age, the need to collect is waning. Lots of import is drifting away. It would take me at least 200 days with no other activity to listen to everything that I have so much of it needs to go! But what did we end up buying?
2023 Buying Stats
Total titles purchased: 102 [↑50% 2022]
Total expenditures: $643.77 [↑27% 2022]
Average cost: $6.31/title [↑13% 2022]
CD: 34
Vinyl: 27
– LP: 14
– 12″: 9
– 7″: 4
Downloads: 25
Blu-Ray 5.1: 1
DVD:1 [1x 5.1 bundled in box]
Amazingly, the number of CDs was almost flat from year to year. There were two less in 2023. Well, they are getting much harder to find! Where I live there’s an annoying paucity of the silver discs! Meanwhile, my trips to Akron, Ohio, usually included stops at Time Traveler; one of the Midwest’s Great Record Stores! This year there was a record of five such trips, owing to family issues that demanded them.
But, following the February visit, which yielded a pleasing bounty of CDs, disaster stuck as by last summer, store owner Scott Shepard was sidelined for some time by heart failure issues. Fortunately, his daughter [who runs her own record store] helped her father keep the store viable during the downtime with a gofundme campaign that was successful. Nevertheless, visits to Akron in August, September, and November each missed the never sunny doorway [every photo I ever take of the store upon entering all look the same…hey, it’s Akron!] of Time Traveler. Only the last visit last week had Scott still holding court in the mecca of discs; both the silver and licorice variety.
LP consumption was way up with 27 vs 19 the last year. I’m not proud of this. In many cases, it was LP or nothing. Fortunately, some were promos otherwise the budget busting wax would have really kayoed my attempts to save money. And like last year the amount of gifts and promos added up to a third of the titles.
As part of the new paradigm, the downloads have exploded this year: 25 vs 10 the prior year. Much of this is down to many of my favorite new music acts [that I’ve enjoyed for less than a generation] all existing in the Bandcamp ecosystem. The last year has seen Bandcamp sell off to new owners and thus far the platform is still operating as normal on my end. Though the late in the year news that the new owners have already sold the platform out to Songtradr, a music placement platform, who promptly cut Bandcamp’s employee roster in half gave us grave concerns.
So how did this year’s numbers look as compared to the last year? Trend lines are still moving up; albeit at a modest slope. And the endpoints are spreading wider apart, indicating lower per-unit costs. In any case, 2023 was still the third lowest year of expenditure since beginning this blog. As the cumulative graph below reveals.
Next: …But What About The Titles?!