The first of these two individually sold disks is prime Southern soul of the 1960's, but not at all its common stock.
Mr. Majik also buys and sells used disks from both lands.
Which explains, in other words, why the best-known Internet merchants sell mainly books and compact disks.
Every so-called record store these days sells compact disks.
Established in the 1980s, Iomega has sold more than 410 million digital storage drives and disks.
Indeed, the two big record companies yesterday introduced a site, Getmusic.com, that does compete with these sites by selling compact disks.
The shop sells little disks, called bobeches, that catch the overflow of wax.
Later, he met a traveling salesman who sold 8-inch floppy disks to computer stores.
So a new 60-second television commercial sells not tapes or compact disks, but Columbia House itself.
The company will be selling bargain-priced compact disks by its female artists along with its cigarettes.