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Vinyl

Don't Throw Out That Turntable Just Yet (No, Really)

vinyl_music_pillow_262818_l.jpgA report in today's Guardian posits that the current record-buying market, which hasn't been kind to CDs, is actually turning into a boom time for vinyl, the format that record labels tried to force fans away from when they brought the compact disc into now-shuttered Record Worlds and Sam Goodys around the country:

Two years on, the White Stripes' Icky Thump has just notched up the highest weekly sales for a 7in single for more than 20 years. Retailers and record labels put the rising vinyl sales down to bands rediscovering the format and to music fans' enduring desire to collect. It's not unusual for fans to buy a 7in but have nothing to play it on, says Paul Williams at industry magazine Music Week. "It's about the kind of acts that have very loyal fan bases that want everything to do with that act," he says. "They maybe will buy the download to listen to, but they get the vinyl to own. It's looked at like artwork."

HMV agrees that vinyl is back from the brink, and the chain has been rapidly expanding its record racks to meet rising demand. The group's Gennaro Castaldo cites the huge popularity of "indie" bands, such as Franz Ferdinand and Arctic Monkeys, which enjoy loyal followings among teenagers and students, especially during the summer festival season.

"Labels have realised that it's cool for bands to release their music on vinyl, especially in limited edition form, which makes it highly collectible," he says.

The aesthetics of albums also make them attractive—the lack of cheap plastic boxes and expansive canvases for cover art make the idea of album-as-collectible that much more possible, something that probably wouldn't happen with a CD unless you're talking about, say, that Jane's Addiction "Been Caught Stealing" maxi-single with the finger handcuffs attached to it in 1991. But for those concerned about portability—and who don't feel like indulging their retro tendencies all the way to a new cassette player—we like the idea that some labels, including Merge and the Beggars Group, have had, which involves bundling free digital downloads of albums with purchases of the vinyl edition. That way, you get the pretty collectible without having to find a '56 DeSoto in order to listen to it while you're on the road.

Back in the groove: Young music fans spark vinyl revival [Guardian]

5:38 PM on Mon Jul 16 2007
By mjohnston
927 views
10 comments

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Comments

  • translation: listening to records makes everyone horny/gets everyone laid.

  • I wish people would be more clear when writing articles like this that this whole thing is a *VERY* UK-specific trend. Don't get me wrong, the American indie fanboy/fangirl niche market for vinyl in the US is as healthy as it's always been, but it's a bona-fide "7-inch singles EXPLOSION" over there in the UK.


  • Strangely, the trend seemed to launch with the very same acts that have propelled it forward -- Franz Ferdinand and The White Stripes.

    7 inch singles were the bread & butter of the UK music world for a very, very long time prior to the CD era. It's not unsurprising that it has made such a comeback there as it doesn't seem to have ever been treated with the same level of "nostalgia factor" placed on vinyl in the U.S. and other countries.

  • Much credit to the author for putting quotes around "indie" before naming Franz Ferdinand as such a band.

  • @Catbirdseat: it's from a London paper. they didn't need to specify it being a U.K. phenonomenon anymore than the New York Times would have to specify something being American.

  • Growing up in the cassette era, I know not this vinyl of which you speak.

    But does this mean that in a few years I'm going to regret throwing out those Biz Markie and Drivin' n' Cryin' cassingles?

  • @Catbirdseat: I agree with you on that point, although I have to admit that I was predisposed to write up this article after seeing the results of the Pitchfork festival's merch tables. A lot of kids ("the kids," even) were toting around vinyl, and I felt like that was significant, especially because the pain in the ass factor was very high.

  • As someone who now buys more new vinyl than new cds, I would say that it isn't a stretch to talk about a vinyl revival. Sure, on this side of the ocean it is probably confined to the "indie" crowd, but it doesn't make it less significant (check out Insound's Top Sellers, and you'll often find the latest releases on LP holding their own against their cd counterparts).

  • Hell, I've been stocking up on SunnO))) vinyl simply so that I can put my kids through college!

    What's that? It won't be worth anything in fifteen years? Shit!

  • and joints smoke better when they were rolled on the sleeve of more songs about buildings and food.

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