By limiting the number made (the quantity supplied), the scarcity is increased and people will pay more.
By limiting the number made (the quantity supplied), the scarcity is increased and people will pay more.
By limiting the number made (the quantity supplied), the scarcity is increased and people will pay more.
I'm not sure if "Boy" released on CD, but that's their first album.
"Octavo" comes from Latin, meaning "eighth" (a reference to the format of some books). Now "Octavo Editions" is the name of an enterprise that deals with printing books and other products (alike, such as CD-roms and other types of things regarding information and/or re-printing), basically thru the Web.
No, it has never to my knowledge been issued on cd, but it is available as an MP3 download.
Not that I am aware of
A CD is a Certificate of Deposit, which is a financial product that pays a higher rate than a traditional savings account in exchange for an agreement that the deposit will remain in the bank for a fixed period of time. Periodic statements are not typically issued for a CD. Some banks such as Bank of America offer a hybrid or flexible savings plan that combines elements of a savings account and a CD. With these accounts, it is possible that a monthly or quarterly statement would be issued.
There really isn't such a thing. The speed at which data can be written ("burned") to a CD is limited by the CD drive itself.
If you are meaning as a solo Artist then: Dangerously In Love B'Day I Am...Sasha Fierce of course there are duluxe/platinum editions which are extra
No, LoveGame belongs to her first CD, The Fame. Bad Romance belongs to her second CD, The Fame Monster. The deluxe and superdeluxe editions of her The Fame Monster CD had both albums on two discs under the album name "The Fame Monster".
There weren't any special editions of that album; however, some were just made pink while others were made the turquoise-sage color.
A CD is "out-of-print" ("OOP") when the record company that issued the disc no longer keeps it in stock. Generally, you can tell a CD is OOP when you are no longer able to find copies of it in stores or at major on-line retailers, although some OOP titles are still around in great quantity. (Jennifer Trynin, anyone?) The most definitive way to check that a CD is OOP would be to contact the record company that issued the title. Sometimes, titles are re-issued with bonus material, and the new version may be widely available. Sellers on eBay often list titles currently IN print as OOP to artificially raise the price of their auction.