How Vinyl Got Its Groove Back
CBS Evening News: In This Digital Age, Vinyl Records Are Making A Comeback
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Dust off that stereo - LPs are making a comeback with a whole new following. (AP)
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Summer Sounds
Music is in the air in cities around the world
"I have approximately 1,200," he said.
They're all vinyl LPs. Scratch the iPod.
"You experience the music versus hearing the music," MacRunnel said.
For 18-year-old Lukas Glickman, LPs have become an obsession.
"I spend all my money on it. It's a problem," he said.
They're true believers in a vinyl revival. Yes, in this digital age, the LP is coming back from the dead, CBS News correspondent Anthony Mason reports.
The group REM released its latest album on vinyl. So did Bruce Springsteen with his album, "Magic." Madonna's "Hard Candy" came out on vinyl and Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" as well. A new LP costs about $20.
"It's a business decision. The major labels are doing it, because there's a lotta demand for it," said Matt Wishnow, president of Insound, an online indie music store.
Vinyl records now account for nearly half of Insound's sales.
"If you're a music fan and you want to have music 'stuff,' this is the most prized 'stuff' you can have in your music collection," Wishnow said.
The vinyl plastic LP was created in the 1940s.
But by the 1990s, CDs had made LPs all but obsolete.
Two years ago, only 850,000 vinyl albums were sold in the United States. This year that's expected to nearly double.
Record Technology, a California vinyl plant, has a nearly 4-month backlog of orders.
"Have you actually played your album on vinyl?" Mason asked Grammy-Award winning vocalist Shelby Lynne.
"Shoot, yeah!" she said.
Lynne was thrilled when her 10th album was her first to come out on vinyl.
"Because look how big that picture is!" she said. "It's just the whole thing. The touchin' it. The puttin' the needle down."
Wishnow calls it the avid music fan's response to the fleeting nature of the digital age.
"This is not a trend. This is going to be there for a long time," Wishnow said.
Believe it. Vinyl is groovy again.
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See all 59 CommentsI think they''re nuts, but to each his own.
Records sound like crappola.
Wonder when the 8-Track will make a come back. lol
Guess who''s laughing out the other side of their faces now, while we prepare to smirk all the way to the bank? Come to Mama and Papa with your moolah, suckers...er...Gen X/Millenial consumers. Step right up and have your money ready! [SNORT]
Grizzster
The puttin'' the needle down."
Yeah "groovy" might not be the operative word as much as SCRATCHY- like after you play the LP a few times and the wear of the diamond needle on that plastic along with some dust scratches from sliding it in and out of the "dust cover" and sleeve starts degrading it.
I absolutely HATED LP''s, dam things will warp, scratch way too easy, they attract dust like styrofoam and just sliding them in and out of the jacket leaves scratches if there is ANY dust which there always is.
All you need is a DVD/CD and a GOOD set of speakers, not those 4" computer speakers you buy for your computer for $19.95!!!, the SPEAKERS are the heart of the whole system, you can h ave the best LP and needle or CD in the world but if you have krappy speakers your music will SOUND like krap.
GOOD speakers are going to run ya well over a grand
Grizzster
Posted by Grizzster"
LOL, yeah worth a lot! used records sell for about a dollar each, NEW ones factory sealed $20, you can buy used records on Ebay and at stores for a dollar or two, they aren''t even worth messing with in a garage sale.
Time to retire them like the 8 track tapes were- lousy technology that served fine for the 1920''s thru 1950''s but like the kerosine lamps, wash-boards and clothe-lines to wash laundry on by the river, and horse-buggy, there comes a time when these things give way for BETTER.
All kinds from the 80''s and even further back. They still play ok. Also some 45s.
Maybe I''m rich and don''t know it.
Goodness gracious, what the f'' was I thinking when I sold it???!!!
Fortunately, I still have my vynil collection and my Harman/Kardon PM665 INTEGRATED AMPLIFIER!!! A true dinosaur of an amplifier (built when H/K gave a s.hit about good sound instead of profits) and when I say dinosaur I mean this baby has a monster sound I have not heard coming from any other digital friendly amplifier regardless of how expensive or "hi fi" they are.
I''m sorry I fell for the CD selling points. Yeah, no scratches and no pops heard on a CD but, Geezus!, how "cold" can a sound get?
I''m not an expert on sound dynamics but I can tell that vynil, 100% of it where you can see through the album when you put it up to the light, is it.
I just hope that the younger generation will get a chance to compare and hear the difference.
Can you imagine going to a record store and be able to finger through vynil albums again? Hold them up and enjoy the art work, smell that smell, and wonder what it looks like when you open it?
What a high, eh?
What a high, eh?"
Hold on there, closethippy1!!! I have a strange feeling you''re not talking about records any more...
What a high, eh?"
Hold on there, closethippy1!!! I have a strange feeling you''re not talking about records any more...
The first all-digital CD I bought was Dire Straits'' MONEY FOR NOTHING. I was amazed at the crisp sound and how you could turn up the stereo and never hear a whisper of hiss. But...
The music had a metallic sound, equivalent to tasting a mounthful of pennies. The warmth and depth of "Sultans of Swing" on vinyl was replaced by a sonic vacuum.
Yeah, I know all about having to clean vinyl and having to put up with the sounds of pops and scratches, but it doesn''t bother me. I remember taping pennies to the tone arm to keep a 45 from skipping. Today, if a CD starts skipping, you have to throw it out and buy another one. Would you rather pay a penny or 15 bucks?
For me, it''s about the music. I don''t care about the format. I have a Columbia Gramophone 78rpm from the year 1909 featuring marches conducted (or performed) by Militar Kapelle. Vinyl is worn as hell, but still plays. Will CDs do the same a hundred years from now?
I own hundreds of CDs. I own thousands of vinyl records. I see no reason to upgrade. Ever hear a vinyl copy of AC/DC''s BACK IN BLACK? Doesn''t matter how cheap the system or how loud you turn it up, the album never distorts. It''s an amazing piece of production.
Anyhow, that''s my vinyl answer.
All the best,
Fidge
http://www.recordstoreday.com/CustomPage/382
I do my art to celebrate vinyl and passion for music:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QisMMD_TKrA
Now I just use my iRecord to preserve the warmth and crackle of analog music.
Peace.
What a high, eh?
Posted by closethippy1 at 09:24 PM
Closehippy1, we have a store like that in my area that has lots of vinyl to thumb through! It''s a place that buys your music (cassettes, vinyl, CDs etc) and you get store credit for them. They have lots of imported vinyl as well for enthusiasts. Nothing like a good crackle from an old 45!
Posted by summarex
I never got out of vinyl either, I own some albums on CD and plastic and there is no comparison on sound quality. My old Quasar 7200 diamond stylus kicks the best CD players butt! Digital just doesn''t do real music justice.
Posted by YBotherAtAll at 11:02 PM : Aug 19, 2008
There''s a couple of used vynil stores in my area I go to and still get surprised by what I can find.
Love them boolegs!
There are also hundreds if not thousands of vynil records that never made it to CD, many of them forgotten classics.
No way man!
I love vinyl and I have decent pickup gear
td124 lp12 bluepoint etc. But any decent CD on any decent cd player will gives you better fidelity and better imaging. Of course you may find vinyl more pleasing, warmer or less harsh. But if that''s the case you are really praising the lack of fidlity! There''s nothing wrong with that BTW:
Audio has gotten mathematical what with sampling rates, time shifting, and Fast Fourier Transforms to try and do what can be done in analog tinkering. Nothing doing with audio has fooled me before and I am not fooled now. I have always found the childish joy in playing music with the biggest stereo I can build the best way to enjoy music.
Audio has gotten mathematical what with sampling rates, time shifting, and Fast Fourier Transforms to try and do what can be done in analog tinkering. Nothing doing with audio has fooled me before and I am not fooled now. I have always found the childish joy in playing music with the biggest stereo I can build the best way to enjoy music.
Posted by raskal_2
a BIG AMEN to that raskal!!
I play a ''72 Les Paul thru a ''72 Fender and wouldn''t trade it for all the digits in cyberland! And for apples and oranges... vinyl reproduction gives the closest resemblance to live anyday. (although the old Akai reel to reel does a pretty good job too!)
As far as your old vinyl records being worth money - this is only true for certain types of records. The rule of thumb (or the rule of supply and demand) is that anything that was popular will not be worth a dime...too many copies are floating around out there. Likewise, anything obscure, independent, in which less than 50,000 pressing were made, is probably going to be worth something.
Analog DOES sound better, by the ways. But I haven''t picked up a new release in vinyl form in years - digital is just too convenient.
I''m surprised however that no one mentioned one advantage of vinyl - cleaning weed on the inside spine of a double album. You can''t do that with CDs!
Ah, memories.
Posted by gmond at 10:45 PM : Aug 19, 2008
Hunt around on the Web. There are still 78 rpm turntables being sold. You''ll have to get a compatible cartridge and needle, though - a standard 0.7 mil LP stylus will just bounce from side to side in the wide grooves of a 78. Look for a 3.0 or better yet a 2.5 mil diamond stylus instead. You''ll also need a good sound processing program like Audacity (freeware) to handle surface noise and compensate for the lack of RIAA equalization.
But the good news is you CAN play and restore 78s at home. I''ve copied most of my parents'' collection and have everything from Stokowski to Count Basie. Go for it!
http://vinylart.blogspot.com/2008/08/groove-was-gone.html
Peace.
Scott Neuman - President - Forever Vinyl
http://www.forevervinyl.com
But 1950s yes; in fact I still have my very first LP; a Decca (London) recording of Beethoven''s 5th; and it dates from 1957.
But despite CDs and all that; there''s still no recording of Wagner''s Der Ring Des Nibelungen that can hold a candle to the Georg Solti/Vienna Philharmonic recording on Decca (London). I have both the Original LPs and the CD reprint of the same recording, and the LPs still sound much better than the CDs. The CD is a bit more convenient so I do play it.
So now the Phono Cartridge companies are going to have to come out with some modern cartridges, that don''t ruin the record, the first time you play it.
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