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Thread started 01/06/09 1:54am

theAudience

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Ray Of Hope for Vinyl?

Amidst the reports of 2008's plummeting CD sales, are these observations involving vinyl.

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Ironically, as digital downloads grew, vinyl album sales also climbed. In 2008, more vinyl albums were purchased (1.88 million) than any other year since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking sales in 1991.

More than two of every three vinyl albums were purchased at an independent music store during the year, the company reported. The top selling vinyl albums were Radiohead's "In Rainbows" (26,000 units), the Beatles' "Abbey Road" (16,500) and Guns 'N Roses' "Chinese Democracy" (13,600).


http://www.verizon.net/ne...le=1498021


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Although vinyl albums gave way to CDs years before SoundScan launched, it's worth noting that vinyl sales hit a 17-year high in 2008 with 1.88 million, up dramatically from just under a million in 2007.

http://www.usatoday.com/l...bers_N.htm

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The ranks of vinyl devotees are growing. Lately, the anachronistic LP has experienced an unlikely spike in sales, decades after the mainstream music industry wrote off the format as obsolete. Major labels are expanding their vinyl offerings for the first time since they left records for dead nearly two decades ago, music executives said.

While the niche may still be small measured against overall sales of recorded music, the surge of interest in vinyl — and, particularly, its rising cachet among young listeners — is providing a rare glimmer of hope in a hemorrhaging industry.


http://www.nytimes.com/20...vinyl.html


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FABIO @ EARWAX RECORDS: All sorts of people are coming in to buy records lately. The big chunk seems to be a lot of younger people, say 18-30 crowd. I think it's partly a fad and partly that they are actually getting SOMETHING for their money which they can hold and refer to. There are also a fair amount of foreigners coming through to get deals with their Euros, Kronar, etc... I know this is in a way looking backwards, and to be honest, it's hard to say that this will last, but for the moment, there is a real interest in vinyl.

http://www.amoeba.com/blo...rease.html

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tA

peace Tribal Disorder

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"Ya see, we're not interested in what you know...but what you are willing to learn. C'mon y'all."
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Reply #1 posted 01/06/09 3:08am

eaglebear4839

In a word, the resurgence in interest in vinyl is...quaint. With all that's goin' wrong in the world today, people really are justified to be nostalgic. But to be honest, since I sold off my record collection, I really don't miss all the snaps and pops and skips that I had to put up with. I don't know why it is people have to have something to hold in their hands. No matter what format it's in, the only way you can actually hold the songs (which are what you're supposed to be buying the album for, right?) is in your mind and/or heart. When you're holding a record, you're holding a COPY of the song.
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Reply #2 posted 01/06/09 4:06am

IAintTheOne

eaglebear4839 said:

In a word, the resurgence in interest in vinyl is...quaint. With all that's goin' wrong in the world today, people really are justified to be nostalgic. But to be honest, since I sold off my record collection, I really don't miss all the snaps and pops and skips that I had to put up with. I don't know why it is people have to have something to hold in their hands. No matter what format it's in, the only way you can actually hold the songs (which are what you're supposed to be buying the album for, right?) is in your mind and/or heart. When you're holding a record, you're holding a COPY of the song.



If you took care of your vinyl those pops and snaps wouldn't happen.
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Reply #3 posted 01/06/09 9:57am

vainandy

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I was in my local record store (not a used record store) and noticed a vinyl section both used and surprisingly new vinyl. The new vinyl (new artists) was nothing I would personally buy but I thought it was odd that it existed.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #4 posted 01/06/09 9:58am

Graycap23

More 2 come.....
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Reply #5 posted 01/06/09 10:00am

vainandy

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IAintTheOne said:

eaglebear4839 said:

In a word, the resurgence in interest in vinyl is...quaint. With all that's goin' wrong in the world today, people really are justified to be nostalgic. But to be honest, since I sold off my record collection, I really don't miss all the snaps and pops and skips that I had to put up with. I don't know why it is people have to have something to hold in their hands. No matter what format it's in, the only way you can actually hold the songs (which are what you're supposed to be buying the album for, right?) is in your mind and/or heart. When you're holding a record, you're holding a COPY of the song.



If you took care of your vinyl those pops and snaps wouldn't happen.


Exactly. I have very few albums that contain pops and snaps and they are all over 20 or 25 years old. As for 45s, I have several that contain them, however, I never kept the paper covers to the 45s because I used to have a lot of them in those wire racks they used to make for 45s.

Like you said, snaps and pops are a result as to how well a person takes care of their records over the years.
Andy is a four letter word.
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Reply #6 posted 01/06/09 11:08am

superspaceboy

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If Amoeba Records can be a litmus test, I'd say there is a new shift in the music paridigm.

I am seeing LOTS of new issues on Vinyl as well as reissues onto heavy Vinyl. Take a look at Bjork...she just re-released all the sugarcubes and her first 4 on heavy vinyl. I think we are going beyond nostalgia.

I think the shift is off of CD's (which still sell) to Digital downloads. I think that if you want to "own" music you get the vinyl. Many artists are going the route of offering a digital link or USB stick with a Vinyl Purchase. Or what Madonna did with Hard Candy...You got 2 pieces of colored vinyl, a bonus 12" AND a CD of the album...for 30 bucks. Totally worth the price if you ask me.

Christian Zombie Vampires

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Reply #7 posted 01/06/09 11:26am

Timmy84

Interesting! Thanks! smile
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Reply #8 posted 01/06/09 12:51pm

lastdecember

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Alot of the rise in Vinyl came about through exclusives that artists signed, and certain stores were carrying these in limited numbers, artists like Elton John,Ryan Adams, RadioHead and others offered bonus tracks if you bought the vinyl version through downloads. But make no mistake the price of producing vinyl is enormous, alot more than cd, so dont expect vinyl to be anything more than a "limited edition" thing for artists that already have loyal fan bases.

"We went where our music was appreciated, and that was everywhere but the USA, we knew we had fans, but there is only so much of the world you can play at once" Magne F
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Reply #9 posted 01/06/09 12:52pm

Graycap23

lastdecember said:

Alot of the rise in Vinyl came about through exclusives that artists signed, and certain stores were carrying these in limited numbers, artists like Elton John,Ryan Adams, RadioHead and others offered bonus tracks if you bought the vinyl version through downloads. But make no mistake the price of producing vinyl is enormous, alot more than cd, so dont expect vinyl to be anything more than a "limited edition" thing for artists that already have loyal fan bases.

Especially compared 2 the production cost of a cd.
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Reply #10 posted 01/07/09 6:33am

SoulAlive

IAintTheOne said:

eaglebear4839 said:

In a word, the resurgence in interest in vinyl is...quaint. With all that's goin' wrong in the world today, people really are justified to be nostalgic. But to be honest, since I sold off my record collection, I really don't miss all the snaps and pops and skips that I had to put up with. I don't know why it is people have to have something to hold in their hands. No matter what format it's in, the only way you can actually hold the songs (which are what you're supposed to be buying the album for, right?) is in your mind and/or heart. When you're holding a record, you're holding a COPY of the song.



If you took care of your vinyl those pops and snaps wouldn't happen.


nod I have hundreds of vinyl albums and most are in mint condition.I often buy sealed,un-opened albums from Ebay.
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