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Tec Startup Garage: BATCH 2 2021B

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Joshua James
Joshua James

Bmg Music Service


The BMG music clubs are the top contenders of all CD by mail services out there. No other companies can begin to compete with the variety, diversity and savings offered by BMG. Columbia House Deals is here to bring you all the latest details on the best deals for purchasing your CDs by your favorite artists!




bmg music service



BMG has been supplying the public with great music at affordable prices for decades. The largest and oldest of the BMG music clubs is the BMG Music Service. This is the service most of you have heard of: 12 CDs for the price of one! Becoming a member of this great service is easy and convenient.


First, you select seven free CDs from BMG's vast catalog of music. Then, you are only obligated to purchase one CD at regular price within a year. After that, you are able to select four more free CDs. As a member of the BMG Music Service, you can also enjoy great savings on additional purchases.


BMG is always offering buy one, get one free specials, clearance specials and deep holiday discounts. No matter what taste in music you have, you will be able to find what you are looking for in the BMG catalog. The great variety of choices includes rock, pop, jazz, Latin, country, hip-hop, easy listening and much more. All of your selections are shipped directly to your mailbox for a low shipping cost. After you have met your one purchase commitment, you can cancel at any time. What are you waiting for? Sign up now with BMG Music Service, and get your free CDs right away!


BMG Music Service has been around for quite some time now and has millions of satisfied members. BMG has deals with record labels that enables them to buy mass quantities of cds at a huge savings compared to the retail store. Make sure you also check out BMG's other music service yourmusic.com. It has the same great selection as BMG, but all cds are only $6.99 and shipping is always free! Many people sign up for BMG to get 12 CDs for the price of 1 (which in the end costs $3.76 per CD), and then sign up with yourmusic.com to get any additional CDs for only $6.99 each. The only catch with yourmusic is that you must buy 1 CD per month to retain your membership. This is fairly easy because it is automatic. You build a music queue, or list, of CDs you're interested in, and they come automatically.


As a new bmg member, you will get 7 free cds of your choosing and then you have to buy 1 more within a year to receive 4 more free. After you buy the 1 within a year, your commitment is fulfilled. BMG will periodically send you newsletters describing the current feature cd tailored to your music interests.. If you do not want this cd, you may decline it, or send it back at the clubs expense. There are over 14,000 titles to choose from in categories such as rock and pop, r&b/hip hop, country, jazz, classical, latin, christian, and more. Read more about BMG


Columbia House was an umbrella brand for Columbia Records' mail-order music clubs, the primary iteration of which was the Columbia Record Club, established in 1955. The Columbia House brand was introduced in the early 1970s by Columbia Records (a division of CBS, Inc.), and had a significant market presence in the 1970s, 1980s and early 1990s.


Although Direct Brands shut down music mail-order operations in mid-2009, it continued to use the Columbia House brand to market videos in the U.S. and Canada, selling DVDs and Blu-rays via the controversial practice of negative option billing. DB Media's Canadian assets ceased operating on December 10, 2010, and all staff were dismissed,[1] while U.S. operations continued as usual. In December 2012, the company was sold to Pride Tree Holdings, Inc. In 2013, the company changed its name to Filmed Entertainment Inc.[2] The sale of the DVD division at bankruptcy auction was announced August 10, 2015.[3]


Columbia Record Club was formed in 1955 by CBS/Columbia Records as an experiment to market music directly by mail,[4] spurring sales to rural consumers and heading off competition from mail-order companies from outside the record industry.[5] New members to the club were enticed with a free record just for joining.[4] To appease brick-and-mortar retailers, titles in the club's catalog were not made available until six months after retail release (later reduced to three months), and retailers that helped recruit members got a 20% commission. By the end of that year, the club had 125,175 members who had purchased 700,000 records[4] ($1.174 million net). The operation grew so quickly that, in 1956, it was moved from New York City to a new home base: a distribution center in Terre Haute, Indiana, a railway-accessible city where Columbia had recently opened a record pressing facility.[4] Within a year, the club had 687,652 members and had sold 7 million records[4] ($14.888 million net) and, by 1963, it commanded 10% of the recorded music retail market.[5]


In 1958, facing the loss of members who wanted a wider variety of records, the club began manufacturing and marketing records for competing labels, including Verve, Mercury, Warner Bros., Kapp, Vanguard, United Artists, and Liberty.[5] Rival clubs operated by RCA and Capitol offered only their own labels' products at the time. Licensors were guaranteed a minimum number of sales, but were held to exclusive, restrictive contracts, which led to price-fixing allegations against the club in 1962, followed by 7 years of mostly ineffective litigation.[5] The licensing program continued and expanded in the 1960s as the music industry grew and changed.[5]


The Columbia Record Club was also notable in continuing to issue product in formats no longer available on the commercial market. After the major record labels quit releasing albums on reel to reel tape format, Columbia still continued to make select new titles available on reel tape up until 1984. 1982 was the approximate year the 8-track tape disappeared from record stores yet Columbia continued to release new titles in the format until 1988 and finally after the major record labels abandoned the vinyl LP format in 1989, Columbia issued select new titles on vinyl until 1992. In all three cases, the new releases on the abandoned formats were usually limited to the new Selection of the Month title (although the country music Selection of the Month had never been available on reel tape unless the album had possible crossover appeal to the Pop/Rock or Easy Listening club members).


In 1982, the CBS Video Club, which had formed the previous year as the CBS Video Library, became part of the Columbia House family.[4] Also, during that same time period, Columbia House and The Cannon Group founded the UK-exclusive mail-order VHS distribution service Videolog. Sony acquired the CBS Records Group, including Columbia House, in 1988, then at 6 million members. Bertelsmann Music Group had recently acquired RCA Records and changed the name of Columbia House's only surviving rival, RCA Music Service (formerly RCA Victor Record Club), to BMG Music Service.


In 1991, the CBS Records Group was renamed as Sony Music Entertainment and Sony sold half of Columbia House to Time Warner, which contributed Time-Life's video and music clubs to the joint venture.[4] Membership was over 10 million at the end of that year.[4] The influence of Columbia House and other music clubs reached its peak in 1994 accounting for 15.1 percent of all CD sales.[6] In 1996, club membership was at 16 million. That year, the Columbia House website was launched.[4]


In mid-1999, a merger was announced between Columbia House and struggling online retailer CDNow, an independent, publicly owned company that had funding and other partnerships with Columbia House and its owners Sony and Time-Warner. The merger was abandoned in early 2000, with Columbia House's poor finances and stiff competition from online giant Amazon.com cited as factors.[8][9][10] Within months, CDNow was purchased by Bertelsmann, which partially merged it with BMG Direct into a venture called BeMusic. CDNow was taken over and merged into Amazon the following year. By 2001, music clubs accounted for less than eight percent of all CD sales, coinciding with the ascent of Internet shops and retail outlets such as Amazon and Wal-Mart, which offered music at similar discounts without subscriptions.


In 2008, the company, including its Canadian branch,[14] was acquired from Sony BMG by investment firm JMCK Corp., a Najafi Group company based in Phoenix, Arizona, and the name was changed to Direct Brands, Inc.[12][13] Direct Brands consolidated the remaining facilities, and shut down music mail-order operations on June 30, 2009. However, Direct Brands continued to operate a DVD and Blu-ray Disc club under the Columbia House brand in both the U.S. and Canada.[13] The Columbia House name is still owned by Sony Music Entertainment, and is used under license.


The parent of the Columbia House music and DVD clubs announced on August 10, 2015, that it plans to sell its Columbia House DVD Club business, which sells recorded movies and TV series directly to consumers, through a bankruptcy auction.[3]


In December 2015, Columbia House's owner, John Lippman, announced his intention to begin a vinyl subscription service that will allow subscribers the ability to choose which records and genres of music they receive.[17][18][19]


Columbia House practices negative option billing,[13] a form of commercial distribution in which services are automatically supplied to the consumers until a specific cancellation order is issued.[22] The practice has drawn many complaints from consumers.[23] The Federal Trade Commission has published information to protect customers against this practice,[24] specifically referencing a $0.49/video offering.


In December 2008, BMG Music Service (now yourmusic.com) supposedly sold an unknown number of fraudulent debt claims to a collection agency, National Credit Solutions. Supposed delinquents were not made known of their debt and most had not made purchases with the company for at least five years. Victims of the sale of false debt claims were not made known of either their debt or the account opened with National Credit Solutions. Most victims learned of the collections agency account when they were denied for a loan, had credit cards canceled, or checked their credit reports.[citation needed] 041b061a72


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