Hell, my vehicle doesn’t even have a CD player. In the rare instance I buy a CD anymore, it’s generally from the artist website. Otherwise, Amazon. I mainly only do that to:
A) support the artist
B) have a high res copy that I’ll rarely ever actually listen to
I’ve said it a bunch of times in similar threads. It’s just too inconvenient most of the time to bother with cd’s. Most of my listening is done while driving. In the late 90’s, I carried tons of cd’s in my truck. Until someone busted out the window and stole over 200 cd’s. They weren’t even visible. I had home recorded stuff, bands I’d been in, local bands I loved. Sh!t that the thieves couldn’t care less about. Crushed me when it was gone and I’ll never hear it again. Yep, I’ll pay the $10/month to Apple to be able to listen to whatever, wherever. I’ll load my bands rough mixes up on my pc and listen thru Apple Music while I drive around. Also to explore things that I don’t know if I’ll like or not. If I find something I like and listen multiple times, I’ll buy it. Are there things about about Apple Music that bother me and piss me off? Sure, but the benefit far outweighs the cost. I’m sure there’s other ways to do everything I want to do, but I get a quality enough product that I can do what I need to do with ease. It always works and isn’t a giant pain in my a$$. I’m not a super Apple fanboy, I can’t bring myself to spend the money on a MacBook or any super high dollar item. My iPhone and iPad work well without being a pain so that’s that. I can play guitar thru my iPhone in a pinch and it doesn’t sound horrible. Doesn’t replace or sound as good as my amps, but it works- anywhere. Back of van en route to gig, hotel room, backstage, wherever. Apple ecosystem can be annoying for certain reasons, but reliability and availability rule.
Sorry for the derail. I was gonna delete it all but I wasted too much time typing it.

I’m not trying to convince you to change your thought process, just share my experience. Anyway, artist site or Amazon.