Cassette Album Sales in the US Grew By 23% in 2018 (billboard.com) 133
An anonymous reader shares a report: Thanks to such acts as Britney Spears, Twenty One Pilots and Guns N' Roses, along with soundtracks from the Guardians of the Galaxy franchise -- which boasts the year's top two sellers -- and Netflix's Stranger Things series, cassette tape album sales in the U.S. grew by 23 percent in 2018. According to Nielsen Music, cassette album sales climbed from 178,000 in 2017 to 219,000 copies in 2018. While that's a small number compared to the overall album market (141 million copies sold in 2018), that's a sizable number for a once-dead format. In 2014, for example, cassette album sales numbered just 50,000. But, 20 years before that, back in 1994, when cassettes were still very much a hot-selling format, there were 246 million cassette albums sold that year, of an overall 615 million albums.
Why? (Score:1)
Sometimes its good to move on.
Re: Why? (Score:2, Funny)
Superior sound quality, duh.
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Compared to what?
8 tracks even sounded better than cassettes.
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Compared to what?
It's probably not much worse than a 128bit MP3. However an MP3 doesn't wear out every time you play it.
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A cassette is MUCH worse quality than a 128kbps MP3. A brand new cassette is only on par with perhaps 22KHz, 8-bit audio. A 128kbps MP3 can sound as good as a CD depending on the source material and how it was encoded.
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That's not really true unless you're talking about a low-end cassette deck. With better decks, audio cassettes can reproduce frequencies up to anywhere from 16 kHz to 20 kHz, depending on the type of tape (metal vs. rust).
And on high-end gear, cassette tapes can provide about 72 dB of usable dynamic range, which is about 12 bits, not 8, though most commercial music these days has only about 3 dB of dynamic range anyway, so I'm not sure the
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That's how it always goes... with the right player! and with the right tape formulation! Except you know that manufacturers of pre-recorded tapes aren't going to spend any more than necessary. I keep wanting to use the word "audiophool", but this is like a hipster mimicry of it.
I remember in the mid-80s I decided to buy a pre-recorded tape. There was a glitch in it, so I took it back for exchange. The replacement had a glitch at the same point. I then realized that it was a glitch in the copying process, a
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Oh wait, I want to listen to the next song. Let me find it.... nope, not yet.... nope, not yet.... nope, not yet... wait, went to far..... a bit more.... there it is.
I still have my cassette deck, though I haven't used it in over a decade. Anyhow, it had a search for next track option. Actually it has the ability to set up the order to play the tracks. Granted, I don't think I used that after trying it when I first got it, but being able to skip to the next track (or two or three)was a nice feature.
Hisssssssssssssss
On type 4 tapes using Dolby S hiss wasn't much of an issue. Actually, I'd bet the sound was better than a lot of the MP3s.
I grew up with this shit. What the hell is wrong with these people?
Yeah, I don't get it either. I have a few cassettes
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Nope.. dolby B/C
While the deck I have also has b/c it has Dolby so as well, which is what I stated.
Hipsters... (Score:2)
They are a plague on this world.
Perhaps if someone could "ironically" bring back strychnine as a recreational drug?
Re: Why? Green Felt tip (Score:1)
I hear the sound quality is improved if you colour one side of the tape with a green felt-tip marker. Oh, and use mono crystalline silver instead of oxide,
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I think the better question to ask is: WHO is buying the tapes?
I'd be willing to bet it's Boomers and/or Gen-X. I highly doubt it's teens or the 20-year olds given the data:
1, Soundtrack: Guardians of the Galaxy: Awesome Mix Vol. 1 @24,000
2, Soundtrack: Guardians of the Galaxy, Vol. 2: Awesome Mix Vol. 2 @19,000
3, Twenty One Pilots, Trench @7,000
4, Soundtrack: Stranger Things: Music From the Netflix Original Series @5,000
Not everyone wants to pay a streaming tax.
Also, the 219,000 cassette copies so
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I have no clue what #3 is, but the others listed are all selling on cassettes as a novelty that ties into the retro music (and character) / setting of the corresponding movie / show.
Re:Where are the cassettes coming from? (Score:5, Interesting)
Are you talking about Sony, TDK, or Maxell all of which are still in business and making cassette tapes?
I recently found some cassettes of a band I played with in the 80s and was considering getting something to play them back on. Much to my surprise there was still a very large selection of new cassette players on the market.
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Funny, I had the opposite experience last year. I found one $60 boombox at Walmart that played tapes, and there were few cheaper options on Amazon. Now if you wanted a Walkman clone, there were tons of options.
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I did notice there were pages of portable players on amazon and most of them looked like the same one re-branded but I also saw a few dozen rack mountable dual cassettes and tuners with cassette. I didn't really see anything in the line of a boom box that I might toss in the garage to play tunes while I was working, but that's not really what I was looking for. I just wanted something that could play back and had an aux out I could plug into the pc.
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Wanna know how I know you haven't heard most, (all?) of those albums?
Every one of them is going to have 60s, 70s, and 80s music on them, except for Twenty One Pilots, which is a recent thing.
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People who wanted to be able to say that they taped over a recording of Britney Spears, Twenty One Pilots, or Guns N' Roses.
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Because when the tape wears out, you have to purchase it again, at full price.
No, you do what we wish we could have done back in the day: immediately make an MP3 of the tape for everyday play and store the original in a place where we hope it won't deteriorate.
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I think the better question to ask is: WHO is buying the tapes?
I'd be willing to bet it's Boomers and/or Gen-X. I highly doubt it's teens or the 20-year olds given the data:
I'd bet it's more likely teens and 20 somethings. I have a teen and she thinks albums and cassettes are pretty cool. In fact a lot of the indie bands that she likes only release their albums on vinyl and cassette.
Most of us that are older remember how terrible cassettes were and how delicate vinyl is. I think it's a novelty to kids. There might also be some backlash to download/streaming as it's nice to actually have a physical object when purchasing music.
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Cassettes used to be cheaper to manufacture, both the tapes and the players. CDs now can be pressed in quantity for pennies, and it might cost a dollar complete with case and booklet. But you do need to press at least a thousand of them to get the good price. Cassettes can be made in low quantity, but the process is still pretty bad for quality.
They were also more portable. The smallest CD players are like 50% bigger than the smallest tape players, and at first CDs were prone to skipping from being bumped
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Yea. Since skipping the song takes time and makes the tape pack uneven, I don't do it. On the other hand, when playing music from my phone I start thinking about the next song, maybe I should choose another and so on. I do not do that with tapes, even if I have more than one tape in my car (expecting to drive longer than the tape plays), I listen to both sides of one tape, then insert another.
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Convent size
Convents varied in size, though - from very small ones [wikipedia.org] to very large ones [wikipedia.org].
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Convent size, doses not skip, cheep less distracting in a car than a phone. Seems like wins to me
Before the mp3 flash player, tape decks still made sense for people driving on bumpy roads, or off-road. But now that flash is cheap and so are mp3 playing head units, and basically all new head units play mp3s, they make none at all.
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It's probably just for collection purposes. Look at the retro video game scene: pretty much the entirety of these games can be played via an emulator (or many of the better ones using one of the new "mini" consoles), yet people still want to have one of the physical cartridges.
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pretty much the entirety of these games can be played via an emulator (or many of the better ones using one of the new "mini" consoles), yet people still want to have one of the physical cartridges.
Almost all mini consoles are actually emulators, and some of the best-loved games on some consoles don't work well in emulators.
Because Some People Like To Buy Physical Things (Score:4, Interesting)
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We call these "flash drives."
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Because I still need sweet tunes for my Camaro.
What's up with that? (Score:5, Interesting)
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You can't make your own record, but you can record your own tape with the music you like.
Also, some music was only released on cassette, so if you want that, you have to buy the cassette or find someone who has it, then borrow and copy it.
I also like that I do not get tempted to skip/choose songs when playing a cassette and can concentrate on doing whatever I am doing instead of choosing songs. It's like listening to radio, but there are no commercials or news.
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You can't make your own record, but you can record your own tape with the music you like.
That's nice, and sure, mix tapes still have a reason to exist, but this is about pre-recorded cassette sales. If you're going to make a mix tape from that, you need two tape players, one of which has to be able to record. (many portable cassette players are play-only) It's easier to record the mix tape from your phone... if you still have a headphone jack that is!
This is so dumb that it can only be kids.
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I can see myself buying a new pre-recorded tape, even if the same music is available on CD. Then I would not need to record from CD to tape, I could just play the tape I bought in my car or on my portable player.
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They aren't bought to be listened to, they are novelty items that just happen to be a dead music format. Buying the Guardians of the Galaxy or Strangers Things soundtrack on cassette is not much different than a Star Wars action figure. Many of them will end up on a shelf as decoration and never get listened too.
Did You Never Want To Experience Something Older?? (Score:5, Insightful)
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You can get pretty close to CD Quality (Score:2)
Poorly mastered CDs sound flat and dull, especially for Rock music & Metal. That's less and less a problem, but I could see why some audiophiles would want tape. It's a different sound. Kinda like bands that play on shit instruments (especially guitars) because better stuff doesn't sound right.
Reminds me of one of my favorite music jokes (forgiv
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To then take the tape deck apart and repair it again.
To get a band to send in their music to play on tape in the next video clip.
Listen to that quality tape hiss and music via a compressed video clip online.
Another 1980's repair video next week.
Click for the bag of parts needed to replace all the capacitors.
Click for the needed rubber belts.
Click to get a notification about the next re
What about 8 track??? (Score:4, Funny)
I still have an 8 track player in my very old car... why can't I find any new music for it?
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Become the change you want to see in the world.
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https://www.dallasobserver.com... [dallasobserver.com]
Ferret
I understand vinyl (Score:2)
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I've heard very good sound quality from cassettes, if they are the right kind of tape.
It's not the quality of the sound, it's the noise. Even the very best cassettes (and I've fiddled with a variety of them over the years, sometimes even in good decks) feature a crapload of noise. There's just nothing like digital. Maybe it doesn't bother everyone the same, but it definitely bothers me.
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Yes, but the noise from cassettes is warmer.
RIAA secretly behind this? (Score:1)
1. a new format shift and reason to sell music with unending copyright - again!
2. no DRM that can be defeated! ALL copies on cassette will eventually self destruct!
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Basically, in the case of casettes it looks like it's (mostly) not about the music and more about the context making them collectible.
3 out of the top 4 are basically equivalent to having action figures or similar. Fun collectible that happens to function. Also they more than make up the entirety of the boost in sales, and the sales represent less than 0.1% of the market, so it's fun to report on and I'm sure fun for the people making and consuming the tapes, but not actually significant at all in the gen
Cassette players (Score:4, Funny)
This is great news. Now if I could only get back my '82 Jetta so I could have something to play the cassettes on. I spent two weeks' pay on the sound system in that car and it fuckin' rocked. The car didn't really run all that great, and the heater didn't work, and one of the windows only went halfway down, but man I could bomb the bass in that little fucker. I loved that car. I'll bet if you could vacuum the upholstery you'd find a half-oz of some pretty decent weed I dropped there. It was green and had a 1.7 liter engine that supposedly could put out 74 horsepower, but I'm pretty sure most of those horses were pretty sick, because I really had to stand on that accelerator to merge onto the Kennedy Expressway. Good times.
Now, if you wanna bring back my '75 Honda Civic wagon (also green) with the 8-track player, you'd really have something. I went away to grad school in New York in that bitch and I remember there was a track break smack in the middle of Heroin off Lou Reed Live. It used to drive me crazy. He'd sing "when the blood begins to..." and there'd be like this thunk and 10 second pause while switching tracks before he'd sing, "...flow". It was one of like 4 tapes I had when I left Chicago.
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I'll bet if you could vacuum the upholstery you'd find a half-oz of some pretty decent weed I dropped there. It was green and had a 1.7 liter engine that supposedly could put out 74 horsepower...
You're right, that is some pretty decent weed.
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The data would suggest otherwise.
National Audio Company (Score:3)
What I've heard (Score:5, Funny)
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I've heard the distortion from a tube amp and cancel the distortion of the cassette. I've also heard the Earth is flat and vaccines cause autism.
That reminds me to look for my DEVO cassette...must listen to "Mongoloid".
[Checks Calendar] (Score:2)
I've got good news for them! (Score:2)
Will road spaghetti return? (Score:3)
Ask your grandpa about those windblown piles of tangled cassette tape angrily thrown out of cars when the tape eventually broke or the player mechanism jammed.
It's not 23% it's 25% (Score:2)
There were 4 users and now there are 5.
Good tapes sound fantastic (Score:5, Informative)
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This raises a good point, If you want poor audio quality we already have vinyl.
Guardians of the Galaxy, duh (Score:4, Funny)
Didn't you guys watch the movie? It was basically just a 2 hour advertisement for the cassette tape format.
The sequel was also plugging the Microsoft Zune. I think the used Zune prices on ebay will be going up.
No DRM, no '''streaming''' fees (Score:2)
You don't have to pay for '''streaming''', or buy a DRM-laden '''digital only''' copy that someone can yank back with no notice.
Will last decades if taken care of properly.
Cassette decks are mature technology, inexpensive, and reliable if properly maintained.
Easy to make your own '''mix tape''' just like in the old days, without any technical knowledge or software to learn.
Be happy they're not just pirating it, they're actually paying for legal copies.
I see no real down
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23 percent??? (Score:2)
So they sold roughly 15 cassettes versus last year's sales numbers of 12 tapes sold??
I wonder how reel to reel is doing these days.
love for oxide (Score:1)
useless (Score:2)
This article was completely fucking pointless and of significance to pretty much nobody on the entire damn site. "Slightly more hipsters buying cassette tapes than last year."
Fuck this. I'm done with Slashdot.