I think there are three things hurting music stores beyond the often-repeated phrase "CDs are too expensive." (It's funny to me how people say that, and yet cram into movie theaters in droves to watch something for a couple of hours they can't carry out with them to take home, and there is nothing cheap about movie prices, drinks, popcorn, and candy.)
Those three things are:
1. The currently bad state of the economy.
2. People shopping online and not supporting actual physical stores. People need to be mindful of this trend, because the money often saved by shopping online has an economic cost in terms of lost jobs and lost incomes. I shop online for some hard-to-find items but I do not want to shop for everything online. It is fun and relaxing to shop in stores, and I am afraid the younger generation does not appreciate those things. Plus: do Americans need to be any more physically inactive, non-social, and self-centered people than we are already? If there is more staying home to order things on the computer, then these trends will only get worse.
3. The currently bad state of the music industry, in which mostly younger people who comprise the bulk of the music-buying public do not buy albums anymore like older did and still do. This is because few good albums are released by recording artists anymore, compared to years and decades ago. People talk about getting this or that song online or on I-Pods and brag about the technology involved, but the real reason for it is the recording artists younger people listen to do not release consistently good albums that would cause many people to go out to the stores and buy them. Older people still buy albums of past artists, but since many people either have these albums already, or are working their way through the massive and extensive list of great albums from the past decades of music to purchase in the future, they are racing in the clock as these music stores close. If younger people are not going to open up their minds and buy older music just because it's "old", then music stores will not survive on the lackluster sales of newer music.
I have deeply-held views concerning this and other issues, and nobody has to agree or disagree with them just for the sake of doing so. I do believe that the reasons that I have given to add some perspective to the closing of music as well as other types of stores relate to what has been mentioned in this post. People need to ask themselves, why is the economy currently in bad shape? There are different reasons, of course, but one of the leading reasons is an old-fashioned one that gets little attention in spite of how important it is: There are too many people losing their jobs, and either not finding another one to replace their old job, or finding one that pays less than their previous one. We may live in a technological age where you can order goods and products off the internet, but that still does not take anything away from the fact that people still have to work somewhere. If people think that not going to shop in stores in preference for shopping on-line is not going to do damage to the economy, they are either in denial or are not very knowledgeable about the way an economy works. Without a middle class, folks, you cannot have a strong and thriving economy; it just simply does not work otherwise.