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Tower Records is an international retail franchise and online music store [1] that was formerly based in Sacramento, California, United States. From 1960 until 2006, Tower operated retail stores in the United States, which closed when Tower Records filed for bankruptcy and liquidation .
T-Palette Records is a Japanese record label, specializing in idols. It is a subsidiary of the Japanese franchise of Tower Records. [2] History The record label was ...
Retrieved from "https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Tower_Records_Japan&oldid=606920602"
"Don't Say Good-Bye" is the first in the five-single series of indies collaboration singles by Japanese girl group Melon Kinenbi, in a collaboration with Beat Crusaders. It was released as limited distribution on June 24, 2009. People that purchased the single from the Tower Records online store received a free original computer wallpaper. [1]
As of August 2024, numbers for digital downloads are taken from iTunes, Amazon Music, the official Oricon store, RecoChoku-owned services, Avex's Mu-mo, Music.jp, and Mora. Streaming statistics are adapted from Apple Music, Amazon, AWA, Au Smartpass, KKBox, Spotify, Tower Records Music, YouTube and YouTube Music, Line Music, and Rakuten Music.
Encouraged by the immediate profitability of the second store, Russell Solomon expanded to Los Angeles in 1970 and added 26 more locations in the next ten years, including the Sapporo, Japan, store in April 1980. Over the next decade, Tower Records spread across the globe selling books and videos in addition to music.
A Tower Records store in Nagoya, Japan, November 2023. Record sales or music sales are activities related to selling music recordings (albums, singles, or music videos) through physical record shops or digital music stores.
The revamped store was reopened in 2013 attended by many of the world's biggest stars including Paul McCartney, Robbie Williams and Elton John. The largest record shop in Ireland is Tower Records in Dublin, the largest in Asia is Tower Records in Shibuya, Tokyo and the largest in the United States is Amoeba Records in Los Angeles.