goodvibes
Headphoneus Supremus
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- Dec 28, 2009
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While not the case for me but from a marketing standpoint, vinyl is in hospice but so is CD. Hopefully it will linger but even new releases are considered addition lines of revenue at a higher price and not a replacement for CD or download. New releases are also almost entirely mastered in the digital domain so it makes the vinyl release aspect more style than substance. That last years top album title was Abbey Road may be telling. Great album but classics don't drive a market. Other than handling your medium and those wonderful album covers, they're usually redundant, even from a sonic standpoint. Take the latest Beatles set at $400. They were all remastered in the digital domain. The masters were recorded at 192k a while back and by the time it was pressed had been downsampled to 48k. They sound better than your beat up American pressing but if you can get hold an original British and a couple other pressings made from the first batch of stamps and master tape, they are clearly better. The other aspect is that consumers have become accustomed to something quiet. That box set while made to high standards is seeing a lot of returns due to noise not being accepted on a premium product, mostly no fill. The hassle and revenue loss for dealers doesn't help vinyl as aficionados become more critical.
I'm a fan but also a realist. Vinyl, while it could outlive CDs as a niche is never going to be a force again. There's a reason that new vinyl releases also typically come with a free download code or CD. The yearly % increase record sale bell curve peaked in 2011 and record sales still account for less than 4% of the total market.
I'm a fan but also a realist. Vinyl, while it could outlive CDs as a niche is never going to be a force again. There's a reason that new vinyl releases also typically come with a free download code or CD. The yearly % increase record sale bell curve peaked in 2011 and record sales still account for less than 4% of the total market.