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Music

'The Insane Resurgence of Vinyl Records' (thehustle.co) 190

"Fueled largely by millenial hipsters under the age of 35, the old, outdated format has risen from the dead," argues the Hustle: In the 1970s, vinyl sales peaked at 530 million units per year and accounted for 66% of all music format revenues... [B]y the '90s, vinyl sales dipped to less than 10 million units — a mere 0.1% of market share. In recent years, though, something odd has happened: Vinyl has made a small but mighty comeback... In an age of fleeting digital pleasures, vinyl has quenched a thirst for tangible assets.

For each of the past 15 years, sales of new vinyl have gradually increased. In the first half of 2021 alone, 17 million albums were sold — an 86% jump from 2020.

In an extremely rare twist, an old technology came back to surpass a newer one. Last year, for the first time since 1986, vinyl records outranked CDs in annual sales. This year, they're on pace to more than double CD revenue...

These figures don't even include the millions of used records sold through online marketplaces like Discogs (9 million active listings) and eBay (3.5 million), or at the 1,400 local record stores peppered throughout the U.S. Per Forbes, used vinyl sales are likely 1.5 times those of new records, or about 50 million units based on 2021 projections.

84% of the music industry's revenue now comes from sreaming, the article acknowledges. (And a vinyl record creates 12 times as many greenhouse gas emissions as other music formats.)

But for artists, the economics are undeniable. Even though the price of polyvinyl chloride has quadrupled since 2020, "A band would have to amass 450,000 streams on Spotify to match the profit of 100 vinyl sales."
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'The Insane Resurgence of Vinyl Records'

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  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @03:52PM (#62049973)

    Now, I'm old and certainly not the target market for any kind of music (I just watched a "best 300 songs of 2015" video and didn't know 90% of the songs there), but I was under the impression that by now everyone is just getting their music for free from YouTube and the like.

    • I pay for Spotify. I hope to keep Joe Satriani and Tommy Emmanuel in strings.
      • by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:27PM (#62050085)

        It's sort of funny how we went from a generation that paid for music (vinyl, cassette, CDs), to a generation that laughed at that idea (Napster, Kazaa, Limewire, SoulSeek, Torrents), to a generation that pays for music (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music)

        • from a generation that paid for music (vinyl, cassette, CDs)

          If you were paying for music on cassettes, you were using them wrong. Of course, the quality after umpteen copies was crap, but as kids we didn't care.

        • by i_ate_god ( 899684 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:51PM (#62050185)

          It was never about money. It was about convenience. Spotify is as easy as it gets for listening and access. I do get that Spotify is not friendly to artists but I really don't want to go back to maintaining a collection, whether it be a book shelf full of media or setting the right ID3 tags. Netflix is also easier than pirating and cable tv. Though with the current trend of everyone having their own streaming service things are starting to look more like cable again. At this rate there will be a point where pirating is easier again

          • your half right. spoitfy etc is easy. but vinyl is about the tangible copy in a physically large and beautiful format. im slowly buying the music I like and pirated back in the day on vinyl because of the artwork and because I want to support the artists I didnt give a cent too the first time around when I was poor. But I listen to exactly the same music on spotify as part of playlists, and for convinience. I very rarely startup winamp for the mp3 I still have and I would never bother to play a cd.
            • You could buy the CD and still have art and a decent quality sound. Records are even more delicate than CD. They scratch, skip, distort when exposed to heat or sitting in a milk crate in your window. They are not very portable. The cleaning chemicals are very toxic (take a whiff of amylnitrate). PVC makes chlorine gas should it catch fire. Back in the day of vinyl most people had a collection of maybe 50 albums. Especially in the era of one-hit-wonders. Why waste valuable realestate on a LP when all the ot
          • by goombah99 ( 560566 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @11:30AM (#62052131)

            Why do you love your iphone? it's because it's a fondle slab. A weighty totem in your pocket. It feels good to touch it in the same way a cigarette in the fingers and lips feels good to a smoker. The nicotine adicts you but you soon assocaite the pleasure of the nicotine with the sensations of the biting smoke intake, the rituals of lighting the cigarette. The same is true of many addictions. Poker chips are made to feel good. Iphones feel nice. it's all about turning a mental pleasure inot many channels of sensory experience.

            Vinyl records need to be handled with a carful touch. cleaned and brushed. You have to activate them in some mechanical way. It's not the music but your physical involvment in the rituals of making it play.

            Tapes were less so but making a mix tape by manually cueing up varied tracks then recording them to tape was a project of many hours all done in real time. It was not dragging mp3s into a different folder. There were mistakes to make, levels could be set wrong. It was engaging to all parts of your brain.

            Simply listening to music with the least possible hassle isn't as satisfying an experience. And when you listen to your mix tape, you get to think about not just the music but the act of making the tape or the emotion behind the making of the tape.

            I can see why people like vinyl. it's not about the quality or ease of the music at all.

        • to a generation that pays for music (Spotify, Apple Music, YouTube Music)

          Sorta, but the whole music industry really is a shadow of its former self:

          https://www.visualcapitalist.c... [visualcapitalist.com]

          When I got my first job, minimum wage was $3.80 / hr and a compact disc was $14-$16. Think about that, 4 hours' wage for one album. It was lousy.

        • I paid $25 for a 30 minute kpop CD (actually for the booklet), and I paid about $30 for Paris Hilton's hilariously awful album (nice vinyl, though). But I wouldn't pay shit for youtube music. That's what adblockers are for.

      • by SeaFox ( 739806 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:37PM (#62050131)

        I pay for Spotify. I hope to keep Joe Satriani and Tommy Emmanuel in strings.

        You're not going to do that with Spotify's "fractions of a cent per play" revenue sharing with artists. You want to keep the makers making you need to be buying merchandise.

      • by sg_oneill ( 159032 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:42PM (#62050147)

        Buy the albums. Like most people on slashdot I was in my broke-ass 20s around napster and fell into the habit of assuming music is free. And I guess it kind of is.

        But its shocking how bad Spotify is for musicians. I assure you , very little of your $9 is actually going to the artists. Its in the order of $0.003 per stream, meaning to earn a dollar you'd have to listen to a song about 300 times. Which means for a $10 album, you have to listen to about 3000 streams to pay for it. And you still don't "own" it at the end.

        But spend $10 on the album, and the artist is most likely getting between $7 - $8.50 depending on the platform and if the band is self publishing. That literally can put a meal on a bass players table.

        At this point in our lives, most of us can actually afford to buy the albums that mean things to us., Covid has destroyed the touring part of musician incomes that had become the sole remaining sure-fire income. Spending $10 on a bandcamp, itunes, or amazon album means that band can actually afford to not have a shitty day job and keep putting out banging tunes.

        Honestly, as a musician, I'd rather you just pirate bay my music than keep funneling money into spotify who are basically pirate bay but your money goes to making some rich guy who isn't me richer.

        • re: music streaming (Score:4, Interesting)

          by King_TJ ( 85913 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @10:12PM (#62050889) Journal

          I'm glad they already modded you up +5 or else I would have thrown a karma point your way for this one.

          I was briefly in a band back around 1991-1993 and at that time, there was so such thing as music streaming or buying monthly subscriptions to listen to songs. You simply bought the albums OR you copied them. And the beauty in that was, anyone "pirating" an artist's albums was still indirectly helping them out. Most people didn't just listen to their music in a vacuum. They popped the cassette in the deck while driving around with their friends, or put it on the stereo at home when they had a party going on.... It helped market your music any time someone liked it enough to pirate it and listen to it like that. It created new fans who WOULD eventually go out and buy an album, or motivated people to pay for tickets to a live concert. (Few will go to a concert to see some band they haven't heard of!)

          IMO, music streaming became the worst thing that ever happened to musicians, because it cheapened EVERYTHING about it. For some low monthly price, people can just listen to anything in an entire recording catalog. Absolutely no incentive to listen to a whole album to learn to appreciate the tracks that don't jump out at them immediately. (And some of the very best music I've listened to has been the "B side" material on albums I bought initially for a few other songs on them.) When you had to pay for the whole tape or CD, you had that incentive to give all of the material on it a chance. After all, you paid the $10 or whatever to own the whole thing. Heck, even if you just pirated it? Same thing held true. You paid for the blank CDR or tape and took the time to copy the whole thing from someone else who already had it. So you may as well listen to all of it at some point. But there's so much else to dislike about streaming, including the fact that recording levels tend to vary drastically between albums. So when you play a random mix of songs from a streaming service, you're often having to mess with the volume control so one song isn't too loud and the next too quiet to hear the intro or lyrics. But obviously, the way artists barely get compensated for it is the worst.

          I think for some people though? Buying the albums on vinyl is a nod to saying, "I appreciate the benefits you used to get from the old-school way of buying music like this. You get those full-size liner notes or at least a nice, big cover with the album artwork on it to look at, etc."

    • but I was under the impression that by now everyone is just getting their music for free from YouTube and the like.

      Oddly, that is what I am doing right now [youtube.com]. Other times is more synthwave and dark synthwave. But still, I have my CDs since I don't have to worry about commercials interrupting the music. I'm still looking to complete my collection at my local 2nd and Charles, but it's been a while since I picked up anything. I'm guessing my tastes don't coincide with most people in my area.

    • (I just watched a "best 300 songs of 2015" video and didn't know 90% of the songs there)

      Did they define "best"? 'Cause it probably doesn't mean what they think it does.

      • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
        Probably they should have said 300 biggest hits, i suspect they go bu ammount of plays since it an easy an relatively cheap/free measure
    • by Rinikusu ( 28164 )

      Yeah, it's kinda weird, too. Like, my band started on vinyl. Then when the digital takeover happened and we were sitting on vinyl, we pushed everything to digital like everyone else because no one was buying vinyl anymore (like, we'd do a 1000 unit batch that we would have sold out of in our first releases, but now we were literally selling.. 50-100 over a years' period). Anyway, after 4 or 5 years of digital only releases we did a Cassette Tape release. Sold out within 2 days of announcement. Over the next

    • Yes, but the market has failed. Being digital, there is no reason to let you pay for 'Mix your own master' from the individual tracks. Generally each country has its own 'mix' and averaging formulas. Imagine the money to be made, when you can order up more guitar, or reposition the drums in virtual space. There are smart people who blend Vinyl tracks with CD enhancement. But the dumb labels are probably keeping this as a last resort option. Being a boomer, I buy almost nothing online, as I don't trust 3rd
    • I bought like 20 albums the past 2 years, most of them vinyl. Including Paris Hilton's latest.

      If you think old people aren't a target for music, you're an idiot.

      Who do you think sells more records, now; that kid the teevee talks about all the time, or Bob Dylan?

      The top 50 best-selling musicians of all time only has 2 people younger than Britney Spears. You heard of her, right?

      What about Guns and Roses? They're on the list. So is Simon and Garfunkel. You know who isn't on the list? Me neither. But U2 is on t

  • I've gone from cassettes in 70s/80s to vinyl in the 80s, to CDs in the mid-80s till MP3s in the early 2000s, then on to streaming. I was re-united with my record collection last year after years in storage. Bought an awesome turntable (for my budget), and already had excellent speakers and receiver. I simply prefer vinyl, despite the obvious disadvantages. It is so intentional, and a complete experience.
    • Re:Love vinyl (Score:5, Interesting)

      by systemd-anonymousd ( 6652324 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:32PM (#62050105)

      I think the experience comes from three things:

      1. It's a self-contained, physical package; you pick the album and are fairly committed to listening to it

      2. The imperfections in the audio make it less clean and "more real" than a digital reproduction

      3. The slightly fragile nature of the vinyl, player, needle, and necessity of specialized equipment gives it fragility that makes you treat it with some base level of respect

      • It may also be about scarcity. It's scarce nowadays and so people value it more.
        I wonder how this quirk of human psychology will fare if we ever achieve a post-scarcity world. Maybe it in itself makes such an achievement hard or impossible.
    • I was chuckling a bit at the thought of a vinyl resurgence after my last visit to my parent's house, where my dad was playing some of his records. It's all vintage stuff - it's like fifty or sixty years old, still works fine. The only thing that's new is the turntable. For their stake, I'm sort of glad they still make them.

      I have to admit, there's something wonderfully tactile about an LP. In some ways, I can sort of see why people enjoy collecting them purely for fun.

  • by phantomfive ( 622387 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @03:57PM (#62049991) Journal

    Target sells Vinyl. It comes with a big attractive picture on the front. I assume that's why people buy it.

    • Re:Vinyl (Score:5, Insightful)

      by sjames ( 1099 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:08PM (#62050021) Homepage Journal

      Vinyl imposes limits on the master. Any idiot can mix down for digital, and evidence suggests that many do. If they try that with vinyl, they'll severely damage some very expensive equipment, so the people mastering for vinyl tend to be more skilled and experienced. So much so that the improved quality from that skill outweighs the degradation inherent in the older medium.

      In theory, CD and streaming offer a dynamic range well beyond anything vinyl can dream of. In practice, due to the loudness wars, digital tends to have it's entire dynamic range crammed into the top percentage point. It might as well be 20KHz 8 bit.

      • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

        by phantomfive ( 622387 )

        I don't think anyone is buying vinyl at Target because of sound quality.

        • Target gets their stuff from the same masters and the same press that any snotty "High Fidelity" inspired independent shop does. What the hell difference does it make to the sound quality what retailer you buy it from?

      • Re:Vinyl (Score:5, Insightful)

        by ArchieBunker ( 132337 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:37PM (#62050129)

        Meanwhile movies have gone the complete opposite direction. They have too much dynamic range. Back in the VHS days did anyone complain about dialog being drowned out by minor sound effects? No.

        • No such thing. The only people who think movies have to much dynamic range are those who haven't setup their sound system property. As part of the spec your playback device should compress dynamic range the way you choose. Just because you have neighbors or sleeping children doesn't mean the world should be restricted to explosions as quite as a loud conversation.

          Realism is the name of the game. If you don't want that in your living room then use the tools at your disposal.

      • Re:Vinyl (Score:5, Informative)

        by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:46PM (#62050167)

        Any idiot can mix down for digital, and evidence suggests that many do. If they try that with vinyl, they'll severely damage some very expensive equipment

        No they can't because it's not the engineer in the studio's job to prepare for vinyl. They can send a digital file full of nothing but square waves and it won't make a difference, the cutting engineer's job is adjust the final mix for vinyl. This is *always* a downgrade over the files they are given.

        With the exception of the odd recording here and there which was remastered by fanatics for vinyl, a vinyl mix is nothing more than the CD mix adjusted by the the cutting engineer. Vinyl is no more dynamic, it suffered just as much from the loudness wars, and about the only thing that gives *some* vinyl the edge is that older masters which were never put to CD were available. Where a remaster was done during the height of the loudness war you could sometimes get more dynamic range if you found an original pre-CD vinyl. But that remaster very likely was also out on vinyl with just as much (actually probably even less) dynamic range.

        The loudness war itself is close to pretty much over thanks to Spotify, Youtube and Apple standardising on applying normalisation to somewhere between -12 and -14LUFS which means you don't get to be louder than your competition, even if you attempt to do so you only screw up your own track.

        That said I don't know anyone who buys vinyl for sound quality. I personally buy it because many songs aren't available on CD and some not even on streaming services.

      • Any idiot can mix down for digital, and evidence suggests that many do.

        I think it's usually a matter of good engineers forced by stupid clients to deliver crushed shit. "Why is my record not as loud as Metallica's? Make it louder!"

    • Re:Vinyl (Score:5, Interesting)

      by DesScorp ( 410532 ) on Monday December 06, 2021 @10:54AM (#62051985) Journal

      Target sells Vinyl. It comes with a big attractive picture on the front. I assume that's why people buy it.

      I'm old enough that I was a kid when vinyl albums were still the market leader in the 70's and early 80's. My parents had nice vinyl collections and and the big fat headphones and home stereo systems with speakers 4 feet tall, etc. The whole late 70's thing. I listened to quite a lot of music. But I never.... never thought vinyl was higher quality than tape (my grandfather had what was then an expensive reel-to-reel player, and then of course, cassettes came along). All the pops and scratches annoyed me even then. I embraced tape, CD's, and then MP3's as fast as I could.

      The ONLY thing I miss about vinyl is the cover art. That was truly part of the vinyl experience. When Star Wars first came out and the country went into the whole craze, my family bought the John Williams double album with the poster inside. I miss that part of the experience. The posters. The cover art and inserts and notes. It was just never the same on tape or CD's. There's no substitute for all that visual real estate.Vinyl album cover art really was a superior experience than anything since.

  • by Babel-17 ( 1087541 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:05PM (#62050009)

    And they can be easily displayed, as they don't have to be shrunk down to CD size. Albums can be opened up like a book, or even have multiple folds.

    The album Blows Against the Empire by Paul Kantner and Jefferson Starship, which was from before the somewhat different lineup of the later band, included a really nice booklet. Lol, it even listed the job openings for the proposed Starship.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

    "The original vinyl album was a single platter in a gatefold sleeve. The cover featured a piece of Russian folk art from a painted lacquer box, attributed to CCCP (U.S.S.R. in Russian). Kantner said he enjoyed stealing the art from Russia because many Jefferson Airplane albums were bootlegged on the Russian black market. The back cover painting depicts a partially opened parcel revealing a room inside with Jerry Garcia peeking out, behind him a Heavy Naked Woman standing on an American Flag the parcel being flown on a string by a trio of breasts with wings. Inside the gatefold is more artwork with track listings and credits, done in silver ink on black background and featuring a Paul Kantner caricature with a head of marijuana-leaf hair rising over a mountainous planetscape and inkblot pair of marijuana leaves in the lower fold. A mushroom on the left hemi-sphere pyramid on the right and the mountainous planetscape is nearly a mirror image. The inner dust jacket was decorated with collages of musician photos, writings and doodles. Original pressings included a full-color booklet as well, with lyrics, poetry and drawings mostly done by Slick during the recording sessions and collected daily by Kantner. Subsequent pressings included a black & white version of the booklet. A small number of promotional copies of the album were released to radio stations on clear translucent vinyl; these are now coveted by vinyl record collectors. "

    • theoretically you could put CDs into a cereal box packed with rolled up posters, full magazine size books. Not even that expensive, how expensive a cardboard box if they can fill it with cheerios and sell it for $3?

      I think if I had any musical talent, and could make something worth listening to. I'd release my CDs with a magazine. Get lots of cool art to flip through while you listen to my album. It's not like stores don't know how to put a magazine on a shelf and sell it. Jewel cases are kind of shit anywa

      • Jewel cases are kind of shit anyways. They are small enough to get stolen and the plastic seems to shatter the first time you open it.

        The concern of theft is half the reason why CDs were sold/displayed in foot long boxes or sleeves when first introduced. The other half is that retailers didn't have to build new shelves to display the CD, they would fit in the old LP display cases, just put two side by side to fill in the space.

        I think if I had any musical talent, and could make something worth listening to. I'd release my CDs with a magazine.

        That's a great idea, just expect every music label to shoot it down in an instant. You could have got away with that when LPs were still a thing but today if the case doesn't fit in the display then no record stor

        • then no record store is going to carry it.

          Yeah, record stores. I remember those, really cool places to checking out music. What ever happened to those? Oooh Amazon.com

          don't want customers asking

          The new generation of customers won't ask anyways. They'll search for it themselves and minimize human interaction. The more like a vending machine you can operate your store, the better.

          Besides, physical media is mainly for the fans and sold at shows.

    • The surprises inside.

      Heart's Greatest Hits (first one) had a collection of photo album pictures.

      Tanya Tucker TNT had a "centerfold" of sorts. The little girl had grown up.

      Jeff Wayne's War of the Worlds came with a picture book.

      There was so much room to work with, just as you said.

      • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

        "War of the Worlds" is a blast.

        Also, the London Symphony Orchestra double album of "Tommy" has a great picture book.

    • by trawg ( 308495 )

      And they can be easily displayed, as they don't have to be shrunk down to CD size. Albums can be opened up like a book, or even have multiple folds.

      Me twenty years ago would have loved this, when I was living with my parents in a nice big house and had plenty of room.

      Now I'm a grown-ass adult with a family of my own living in a small two bedroom flat, trying to buy a small three bedroom house somewhere in my hometown that isn't so far out of town it will mean an hour commute.

      My focus is on reducing the amount of stuff I have. I get the nostalgia of vinyl, having grown up with it, but I have three big bookshelves full of books that I've been hauling ar

  • by JBMcB ( 73720 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:08PM (#62050019)

    I have a huge record collection, mainly because I couldn't afford CDs and records in the 90's were *CHEAP* Instead of buying one CD I could buy four or five records. And, if you lucked out at a Salvation Army, you could buy dozens of records for $0.50 each. The luck part was their condition, of course.

    Nowadays I still play them sometimes. It's nice to have physical copies of things, and the packaging on some of them are works of art in and of themselves. I don't buy so many new records, but I still go crate digging, mostly for weird things. I like obscure and oddball stuff. I have a collection of recordings of ancient calliopes, circus organs, player pianos and other automated instruments that is pretty neat. A small selection of synthesizer demo records, record soundtracks to film strips - oddball stuff like that. Otherwise, I don't really seen the appeal of buying a vinyl record of music you could otherwise get digitally.

    • I have a huge record collection, mainly because I couldn't afford CDs and records in the 90's were *CHEAP* ...

      I have two milk crates of albums on vinyl from before CDs were invented -- most from my wife, who was 19 years older than me and a couple from overseas, like Japan from an exchange student when I was in 10th grade. They're all still in pretty good shape and play well. The album art is much nicer than what you can get with a CD...

  • by nagora ( 177841 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:24PM (#62050075)

    Never in my lifetime has so much money been creamed off artists by a pointless middle-man like Spotify.

    I just buy CDs and at least the people who actually create the work get a half-decent cut while I still don't have to listen to shitty vinyl.

    • by a pointless middle-man like Spotify

      While most of the record industry is full of pointless middlemen, at least Spotify provide an actual service. Their underpaying of artists is a disgrace, but not every artists can start their own streaming service or music distribution business. Unlike the classic RIAA Spotify at least provides something of value.

    • by bn-7bc ( 909819 )
      The counterpoint to your Spotify assesment us that never befote could an artist rent a studeo for a few hoers, self publish and and moments kater have thesingke avalabke workd voide with no record label contract at all. Ok discovery might be harder but how was discovery fir those that did not get contracts before?
      • by nagora ( 177841 )

        The counterpoint to your Spotify assesment us that never befote could an artist rent a studeo for a few hoers, self publish and and moments kater have thesingke avalabke workd voide with no record label contract at all. Ok discovery might be harder but how was discovery fir those that did not get contracts before?

        The purpose of a record contract was to rip the artist off. Spotify does that as part of the service.

    • If bands even offer CDs anymore.

      I've noted artist (mostly independent) either offer digital downloads for $15 or vinyl for $30.

      So if you want artwork and liner notes, you're paying a premium. And if you want a better format, you're paying on top of that.

      I suppose it makes sense to bandwagon with trends with vinyl and whatnot, but anymore it feels like dry-humping the cash cow.

  • With vinyl, from many labels and/or resellers you get digital audio downloads along with the physical record. So you're not limited to listening to the vinyl on your living room stereo, you also get the digital files for everywhere else. Me, I love it.

  • by backslashdot ( 95548 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:44PM (#62050163)

    Me I like cassette tape. Nothing like that background hiss.

  • by thegarbz ( 1787294 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @04:54PM (#62050187)

    It's not about the sound, it's about the availability. Many vinyl releases come with limited edition bonuses, magazines, posters, additional tracks... some whole albums aren't available on CD. Can't get the Dee Gees on CD https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/... [wikipedia.org]

  • The reason people say "music sounds better on vinyl" is because music was better back then.

  • by iliketrash ( 624051 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @05:24PM (#62050277)

    There is so much misunderstanding and misinformation about vinyl records versus CD and other high-quality digital formats including most streams, much of which is expressed in this Slashdot page.

    Vinyl is not a technically better medium than digital, say, CD-quality digital or high-quality bit-reduced digital. Vinyl has worse signal-to-noise ratio which gets worse every time a record is played, it has less bandwidth (bandwidth is the range of frequencies that can be correctly reproduced) which also gets worse each time the record is played, and has less longevity. Vinyl records can warp which causes wow upon playback (wow is a frequency modulation at 33 1/3 rpm due to misshapen records). Record players become part of a feedback loop in which the player vibrates from the sound impinging upon it from the loudspeakers which causes uneven frequency response and in extreme cases can howl with a sustained oscillation. The life of records can be extended somewhat by meticulously cleaning them each time before playing but CDs etc. are extremely robust.

    Vinyl records are not better than digital simply because they are analog because vinyl records these days are recorded and processed digitally before being converted to analog for pressing into vinyl. A completely analog-produced recording can bypass any controversial issues about the analog-to-digital conversion process but in contemporary practice that step is taken in preparing a digital recording for analog reproduction on vinyl and the end user doesn't even have a choice in D-to-A converter.

    Perhaps the single most important reason that vinyl is experiencing a resurgence besides hipsterism is that in many if not most cases **the vinyl record does not contain the same signal as the digital version such as CD.** It is a fact, although not a well-known fact, that many vinyl releases contain versions of the music which has been subject to **less dynamic range compression.** I have seen this personally by listening and by comparing waveforms and artist-producers such as Jack White have commented explicitly about this. It is not clear why this bizzare-seeming practice is employed since, as stated earlier, digital has more dynamic range than vinyl.

    Other factors have already been mentioned, such as taking pleasure in holding something physical and having liner notes to learn about the music and artists—CDs obviously can also have liner notes so this argues against streaming media only.

    • by dwywit ( 1109409 )

      "The life of records can be extended somewhat by meticulously cleaning them each time before playing but CDs etc. are extremely robust."

      1. Yes, clean them, carefully, but also - play 'em wet. A usenet post many years ago detailed a trick used at radio stations. A 50/50 mix of distilled water and ethanol, with a couple of drops of dishwashing detergent (technically, you needed ethylene glycol for a wetting agent, but dishwashing detergent is soooo much cheaper). Wet a cloth with this mix and wring it out unt

    • The only people who consider ADC controversial are the same science deniers as those who think climate change is fake, or that vaccines contain bill gates microchips.

      No one working with audio considers it controversial.

  • by VeryFluffyBunny ( 5037285 ) on Sunday December 05, 2021 @05:53PM (#62050335)

    ...so I've used them all extensively. Vinyl's fine as long as you have a deck that you can tune (adjust the speed) so that it's in tune with your piano/keyboard. Cassettes were crap but cheap & convenient & the easiest portable playback & recording medium for a long time. CDs were a big improvement on vinyl, & 8mm digital & mini-disc were big improvements on cassettes. In the 2000s, portable PCM WAV recorders were amazingly good.

    Right now, my phone has 128GB storage card on it & it comfortably holds my MP3 collection (currently 19,525 tracks) & I add to it whenever I want. I just need a free music library app with decent search & playlist functions & I'm golden. For me, the medium isn't the message - I just wanna listen to the music I wanna listen to when I wanna listen to it. Whatever technology makes that convenient for me is great. Today's portable audio quality is great for the price, especially ear-buds.

    What I miss more than anything is friends playing me their latest favourite album when I visit them. Doesn't happen anywhere near as much as it used to. More & more, people are just treating music like it's the radio rather than albums that they want to listen to closely over & over in order to hear more detail, depth & feeling in it, you know, the craftsmanship of playing instruments & singing. But maybe that's a thing only musicians are interested in?

    • What I miss more than anything is friends playing me their latest favourite album when I visit them. Doesn't happen anywhere near as much as it used to. More & more, people are just treating music like it's the radio rather than albums that they want to listen to closely over & over in order to hear more detail, depth & feeling in it, you know, the craftsmanship of playing instruments & singing. But maybe that's a thing only musicians are interested in?

      I hear you. I was in college during the LP era and we’d play albums over and over to enjoy the tunes and pickup new things each time. Sometimes we’d try to get multiple rooms in sync for an album. Hours were spent recording songs from vinyl to reel to reel to make party tapes, curating the playlist to create various moods. Good times.

  • Vinyl records are a “store of value” and “medium of exchange” which supports artistic expression.

    NFT’s would be the closer analogy.

  • Vinyl is simply the ultimate format when it comes to 'owning' the record & actually supporting the artist. A Large box for excellent artwork and notes and a fully analog medium that is substantial in your hands. Listen to it on special occasions, maybe, but most people will still be listening to a digital copy day-to-day.
  • Sure you can get better sound quality in a digital format, but nobody's going to remotely take away your license to listen to your vinyl. Even CDs can be infected with copy protection measures that make them untrustworthy.

  • I can't decide what I like best about vinyl. It's either the convenience, or the low cost to buy music on LP.

  • the CD is not available, never was available, or costs much more than the vinyl.

  • ... but you can keep listening to it long after your streaming service has decided you no longer have the rights to hear the song you paid for.

  • My late wife and I both have a copy of "Demons and Wizards" (Uriah Heep). I bought mine in Germany, she bought hers at Wherehouse (typical vendor of American-pressed crap vinyl). Hold my copy by a pencil through the center and it is a flat disk, while hers looks like an umbrella. Americans bought a lot of really cheap crap vinyl: floor sweepings tossed back in the vinyl pool along with the dirt, over-use of production tools stampers and mothers, and very thin vinyl.

    Despite the nay-sayers, I can hear the

  • I endured clicks, pops, skips, de-essed highs and squashed lows. I was very happy to see it end. I can't imagine why anyone would want to see it return. As for me, I use Spotify. The recommendation robot is amazingly accurate at picking stuff I like

  • If you buy a cheap record player, you should really consider moding it to add a decent pre-amp. This can be done for under $10 in parts. Or maybe $20 if you have to order it all and pay shipping.

    On slashdot we're used to thinking that the RIAA is good for nothing, but they were good for one thing; they standardized the construction of record players. However, modern cheapo units do not have a RIAA pre-amp; they feed the signal from the needle straight into a power amp. It works fine, you hear music come out

    • I think that you don't need a RIAA preamp with a ceramic cartridge (which is what some of the cheap record players use), but you need a preamp with high input impedance. Ceramic cartridge has frequency response with a "built-in" RIAA curve (IIRC that's one of the reasons why the RIAA curve is like that).

  • I have to admit a lot of curiosity as to the quality you could obtain using modern vinyl techniques and modern turntable technology, if you made 78s (so essentially EPs, much like Metallica's Kill Em All except with less dead space). In principle, the higher speed should give you higher quality but with physical needles, there would likely also be more damage (although there are plenty of laser turntables these days). I'm specifying modern methods because obviously the original 78s weren't great and 33s and

In the long run, every program becomes rococco, and then rubble. -- Alan Perlis

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