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Vinyl album sales out-perform digital downloads for first time ever More money was spent on vinyl than album downloads last week for the first time ever, new figures have revealed. The Entertainment Retailers Association (ERA) said vinyl sales earned the record industry £2.4m in week 48 of 2016, while downloads took in £2.1m. It is a significant shift in how people are consuming music. In November last year it was reported that vinyl albums made £1.2m in sales while digital records made £4.4m.
“This is yet further evidence of the ability of music fans to surprise us all,” ERA chief Kim Bayley said in a statement. “It’s not so long ago that the digital download was meant to be the future. Few would have predicted that an album format, first invented in 1948 and based on stamping a groove into a piece of plastic, would now be outselling it in 2016.”
“On top of this, over the last nine years the popularity of RSD has continued to soar across the UK, so it comes as no surprise that the vinyl market continues to surge in this way.”
A report by the BPI, the record labels’ association that promotes British music, was released in May and showed how resurgent sales of music on vinyl generated more income for UK artists than YouTube in 2015. UK vinyl sales increased for the eighth year in a row in 2015, with sales topping £25.1m. British acts including Adele and Ed Sheeran accounted for one in six of all albums sold worldwide. Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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Yeah... A download doesn't make much of a Christmas gift, does it? | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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I'd say a lot of it is to do with vinyl being so expensive. If you download an album from say iTunes, what does that cost? 11 euro? Something like that? Go into HMV or Tower Records and you're going to pay up to 30 quid for the same album. So naturally vinyl will make more money even if more people choose to download. Another reason for it, and this one is applicable to me, is that if you're willing to forego a physical copy, you might as well just get it free by downloading it illegally. Now, personally, I'll almost always buy the physical cd but if a CD copy is unavailable, as was the case with Phase Two and Lotus Flower, I'm not going to pay for a download. So maybe download sales are down because of people doing that too? | |
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sexton said:
Yeah, that's probably the most likely reason. I didn't even consider it because it's not something I do. But the likes of Spotify and Tidal and Deezer (is that one real or did I make that up?) are very popular now so they obviously take a large chunk out of downloads. | |
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i'm just getting back into the world of vinyl... loving it | |
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Wrong forum. All you others say Hell Yea!! | |
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I just bought several vinyl albums the other day I'm old school and I love the fact that vinyl records are doing so well.I noticed that,when I was in Fry's Electronics the other day,there were alot of other people looking at the vinyl section,too....including some youngsters. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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TrivialPursuit said:
Speaking as a 26 year old (still a youngster), I must say that I really don't see the point in vinyl. I've been looking for a record player for my aunt for Christmas and after doing a bit of research on them (reading customer reviews) it seems like I'd have to pay upwards of 300 euro for a half decent one. Then the records themselves are so expensive. I was in Tower Records in Dublin today and it's like 30 quid for an album that costs less than half that on CD. For that kind of money I'd expect the artists to come and play in my living room. I'll stick to CD thank you very much. | |
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MoBettaBliss said:
Can't that be done with cds though? And for a fraction of the cost. | |
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it seems the active word amongst vinyl afficianados would be 'experience'. | |
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I actually kept all of my old vinyl from my younger days,so I have about 8 crates of vinyl records It's true that "new" vinyl records can be expensive,but I mostly buy older records anyway,which I find at used record stores for reasonable prices. | |
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Sorry, it's the Hodgkin's talking. | |
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i still have my old Magnavox stereo, complete with turntable, twin cassette decks, equalizer and *quad* speakers. ah... the good old days. | |
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Here's an interesting article from The Guardian about who may be responsible for the vinyl revival: Vinyl destination: who is actually buying records? Lonely, middle-aged men love vinyl. Before you rush to litter the comments section with gnarly insults under the pseudonym NotAllLonelyMiddleAgedMen, this statement derives from actual data. According to YouGov, the much talked-about record resurgence is driven not by a boom in millennials who want to embrace the novelty of a physical item, but by midlife nostalgia. Those who have recently purchased a vinyl album are most likely to be aged between 45 and 54, apparently. In fact, those in the 18-24 age group are the least likely. It is not just an act of hoarding by hobbyists, either – it has emotional significance: older vinyl buyers are slightly more likely to keep their feelings to themselves (56% of vinyl buyers versus 53% of all UK adults) and enjoy being alone (69% of vinyl buyers versus 66% all UK adults). But are YouGov’s results true? If this blog was a televised news report, the camera would follow me as I walked down the middle of a busy Soho street, wearing a modest grey suit and gesturing wildly before stopping, cupping my hands and saying something authoritative like: “So, let’s take a look.” So, let’s take a look... Read the rest of the article here: https://www.theguardian.c...ng-records | |
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many with their loved ones or a friend Straight Jacket Funk Affair
Album plays and love for vinyl records. | |
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Here's another article from The Guardian that refers to a poll that says half of the respondents who buy records don't play them. I don’t need to play my vinyl to love it Vinyl sales may be on the up, but according to an ICM poll, almost half of people who bought a vinyl album last month have yet to listen to it. And of people who buy records, the poll found, 41% have a turntable they never use – and 7% don’t even own a record player. So as a buyer of vinyl that I no longer play, I have to ask: what’s in it for us? The romance of owning a physical object? Having to go to a particular place and spend cold hard contactless money to buy it? That’s certainly more rewarding than idly downloading a song while you’re sitting on the loo. Or is it just about hanging a copy of Adele’s latest album, last year’s biggest selling vinyl album, on the wall of your lounge to look cultured? Read the rest of the article here: https://www.theguardian.c...store-day | |
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Sorry; Sexton, no offense to you (don't shoot the messenger, I know), but I couldn't finish reading that article. If somebody really would be so stupid as to buy a record that they don't play... then they could just as easily vote for Trump... | |
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If somebody really would be so stupid as to buy a record that they don't play...
[Edited 12/16/16 14:37pm] If you will, so will I | |
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[Edited 12/16/16 15:04pm] | |
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i was actually just discussing the topic of vinyl & downloads with some of the younger guys in the office today, and one of them - a guy barely past 20 - said he owns about 50 vinyl records, even though he has no way of playing them. he buys them mostly to support the bands (most of them are local, indie releases) & for the novelty, and i think i can understand that.
[Edited 12/16/16 17:37pm] | |
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