A case of me bitching, venting or first world problems, but if you pre-order a product 3 months ahead, wouldn't you assume your order should delivered to you directly on time?
I'm not trying to be difficult but even Thrice's site has it capitalized in various spots. However, I'll take the butcher's word for it.
I can't be sure things are delivered on time when I am sending them to my mom who lives like 30 minutes from me, so I have little faith in any mailing system. They do their best, they try, but it's not an exact science. Also, when it comes to vinyl there's delays at the plant and stuff that can be completely out of your hands.
APA Style Blog: Title Case and Sentence Case Capitalization in APA Style What Is Title Case? Letter case - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia Fun little website if you're ever in doubt: Title Capitalization: Your Online Title Case Tool And if you have a Mac, cool little Applescript that you can use to do it for you with a hotkey press (which I use on this very website).
Exactly. It depends on the availability of the product. The only way to ensure they arrived on Friday was if they shipped them out on Tuesday, Wednesday at the latest, and pay for two day shipping (which is expensive).
Was thinking of going to the record shop and picking this up with the other May 27 release date albums - I assume regular black vinyl hasn't been delayed and people are getting it?
The point is: I'm seeing "to" capitalized in a variety of places, including Vagrant, Thrice's web site and Amazon. However, it's lowercase in iTunes. I know what APA/Chicago/AP rules dictate, but you act like bands always follow proper grammar, spelling, punctuation, capitalization etc. My question is not a matter of what is right, generally speaking; I'm asking what the band's intent is.
To to It's really just whatever. Let's go back to talking about Thrice being a Radio Rock band again.
If your stylistic choice is to CAPITALIZEYOURBANDNAME, fine, if it's to ignore the correct title casing on the title of your album, well, no.