If your two options are $18 for a CD with a bunch of songs you don't want and $2 for a single with the song(s) you do want, you're likely to pick the latter. But the latter wasn't an option, so file sharing took its place.
lol no. people share albums you know. like, primarily. people don't say "could you post that link with just the single?" any number of other variables one could bring up but really trust me here. filesharing did not become a thing because of consumer frustration with the decline of the single.
― available for sporting events (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:36 (thirteen years ago)
i sell classical records in 2013! that's all i know. life is good.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=YQpq4T-cGjM
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:44 (thirteen years ago)
US and UK market and cultures very different, please remember. I'm speaking from my experience in the UK.
― they all are afflicted with a sickness of existence (Scik Mouthy), Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:46 (thirteen years ago)
lol no. people share albums you know. like, primarily. people don't say "could you post that link with just the single?"
That's definitely the case now, and has been since at least 2001, absolutely. I was referring to the beginnings of file sharing (ca. 1997-99).
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:50 (thirteen years ago)
i hated when they got rid of singles in stores. and i totally blame the big record companies and they totally lost out on tons of money by not selling them. going into a record store and not being able to buy a top 40 single...kinda half the reason why most record stores even existed!
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:54 (thirteen years ago)
I used to go to a drug store near my house that had cutout 45s. "Back Off Boogaloo" for 50 cents!
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:55 (thirteen years ago)
also, plenty of great-sounding vinyl in the 80's. and dynaflex pressings can sound nice. just listened to a stellar ziggy stardust the other day. but it depends. not all pressings are created equal. in the 70's the oil shortages had a direct effect on records. smaller labels had to use cheap/recycled vinyl.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 18:57 (thirteen years ago)
i loved buying singles. bought them up until the end of the 90's. even cd singles. then i couldn't. unless i went to dance stores and found euro pressings of pop songs. you reap what you sow. you want people to buy a 20 dollar cd and not the single? welcome to napster, idiots.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:05 (thirteen years ago)
My Dynaaflex Ziggy sounds amazing! I really think the importance of condition can't be overstated. Also, while I'm sure there are some easily-led out there who hear crackles and think "ohh, warmth, like fire; me likey!" I don't think that's by-and-large what people mean.
― Clarke B., Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:11 (thirteen years ago)
I guess if there's a problem with albums having too much filler you can complain and reminisce about the glory days of albums that were good from start to finish, or you can buy just one track and the artist and label will make 1/10th of the money. But I don't get why the people who do the former are the assholes. The singles solution doesn't seem like a sustainable option compared to making albums that people actually want to buy (ask taylor swift or adele).
― wk, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:15 (thirteen years ago)
One thing that frustrates the bejeezus out of me is poorly pressed current releases, especially on 180-gram or when they're explicitly touted as "audiophile"... And you've got a crackle throughout the entire thing, or audible distortion. The second LP of Kaputt by Destroyer (my copy at least) is pressed for shit. That drives me nuts. Did that happen as much in the 70s heyday? I mean, I feel like all my old stuff sounds pretty swell when it's in good shape.
― Clarke B., Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:16 (thirteen years ago)
So much straw manning in that blog post holy shit.
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:26 (thirteen years ago)
I don't even know what this vinyl discourse is, I don't hang out at urban outfitters or w/e though.
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:27 (thirteen years ago)
I mean, CDS and vinyl are mastered separately. So when you buy a CD Bookends or something, it's not going to sound the same as the og vinyl. (Not necc. Better! Just different!!). I can't believe I actually have bring that up.
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:28 (thirteen years ago)
I love cds too. It's all wonderful music.
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:29 (thirteen years ago)
endless vinyl-fetishists waxing lyrical about their favoured delivery method online or in print for what seems like the last decade.
Nobody does this.
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:31 (thirteen years ago)
idg arguments about vinyl vs. CDs re: durability. if you take care of either they will last (in general). if you scratch a CD, it's fucked. if you scratch vinyl, it skips. both will last as long as you take care of them. (altho I have had the odd CD that just doesn't wanna play anymore after 3 decades or whatever. not sure what to attribute that to)
― Welcome to my world of proses (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:32 (thirteen years ago)
In terms of the sound, the warmth that so many people describe vinyl as enjoying just sounds like surface noise to me most of the time, a veil through which detail often has to struggle to emerge
And this is just insane... Like, wow. Get a better turntable? Better needle? Records that aren't scratched?
― brimstead, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:33 (thirteen years ago)
my workplace right now -- 6 people looking at used records, one person looking at used CDs.
― i guess i'd just rather listen to canned heat? (ian), Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:35 (thirteen years ago)
Ian: you are Ian from Academy? How did I just now put that together?
― Clarke B., Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:37 (thirteen years ago)
yes, clarke, are you a customer???
― i guess i'd just rather listen to canned heat? (ian), Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:41 (thirteen years ago)
I was in last night just before closing with my bro-in-law... Bought some Discharge, Gorguts, and Roxy Music!
― Clarke B., Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:42 (thirteen years ago)
One thing that frustrates the bejeezus out of me is poorly pressed current releases, especially on 180-gram or when they're explicitly touted as "audiophile"... And you've got a crackle throughout the entire thing, or audible distortion.
a lot of the time crackle is from static electricity
― wk, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:43 (thirteen years ago)
I always use the little Discwasher anti-static brush before I play anything...
― Clarke B., Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:44 (thirteen years ago)
― i guess i'd just rather listen to canned heat? (ian), Thursday, February 7, 2013 2:35 PM (8 minutes ago)
Yeah but at the Academy on 18th the inverse is most likely currently true.
― Evan, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:46 (thirteen years ago)
One thing for singles lovers to keep in mind is that the last time the industry was centered primarily on singles (mid '60s) a 45 cost about 60 cents which is equivalent to about $4 today. And the b-side was usually filler. So if everyone is willing to pay $4 for a single track download on iTunes then maybe a singles-based industry could work but I don't see that happening.
― wk, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:47 (thirteen years ago)
certainly true - plus lots of people checking out the DVDs.
― skip, Thursday, 7 February 2013 19:52 (thirteen years ago)
I still don't get the 'but it's got vinyl mastering!' argument. So...we record onto a hard drive, use digital pre-processors, mix in ProTools then ship out the final mix as digital...and then voila, via vinyl mastering we all of a sudden get sonic awesomeness. I haven't done much A/B'ing myself but I'm going to assume the gains are minimal here. I think most records post-1980 sound terrible anyway on any format, fwiw.
― Johnny Hotcox, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:10 (thirteen years ago)
it's more a bullwark against the common practice of brickwall limiting and overly loud mastering that goes on today....
― downton arby (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:12 (thirteen years ago)
yeah i definitely notice lots of warpage with new vinyl. i think its the demand thing. the pressing plants that are left are working a LOT and i think quality might suffer.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:19 (thirteen years ago)
xp Fair enough, but seems like you'd have to know beforehand that care was taken to avoid that. I have modern vinyl that are compressed as hell and it sounds awful.
― Johnny Hotcox, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:22 (thirteen years ago)
― wk, Thursday, February 7, 2013 2:47 PM (30 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink
I don't think an argument was being made in favor of singles vs. albums. It certainly doesn't have to be either/or (for consumers, that is).
And yeah, it's too late for the industry to start on $4 singles downloads; it wouldn't have been too late if they'd consistently released $4 CD singles in 1997 or whatever. Or if, at the dawn of file-sharing, they'd gotten in front of the situation instead of being dragged behind it with ever-increasing speed.
― Tarfumes The Escape Goat, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:25 (thirteen years ago)
i love a lot of pre-CD digital classical vinyl from the late 70's and early 80's. and audiophiles like them a ton. but if something is recorded digitallynow i have no problem just having the cd. plus, with albums being so long now i'll definitely listen to the cd more. when i was buying rap albums that were 3XLP i ended up not playing them much. or i would just play a side or two.
i own almost no heavy metal vinyl from the 2000's. too expensive and i'm usually fine with the cd version anyway. and most were recoreded digitally. (and a great percentage of them don't sound all that hot no matter how you play them. but i can overlook the in-the-red shit if its music i like.)
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:25 (thirteen years ago)
this is a windmill I'm always tilting at but the place to look first for bad vinyl sound is the mastering job. the cutter and the plant can only do so much with the mastered recording they're given, and practically everybody skimps on that end. people send final mixes off to the plant and let some guy they've never met or seen master their recordings, but mastering is a crucial step, especially as regards the vinyl. there are only a few really great mastering dudes left, a couple in the US and one or two in the UK iirc. Plenty others who I'm sure would be great if the artists/producers were at the sessions but again a lot of people just send stuff off to be mastered which is imo insane.
― available for sporting events (underrated aerosmith bootlegs I have owned), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:29 (thirteen years ago)
yeah i think now a lot of bands just think its cool to put out vinyl but they don't really have anything to do with the final product.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:44 (thirteen years ago)
but i do see actual physical problems with new vinyl that doesn't have anything to do with the music and it makes me think that things are rushed because demand is so high.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:45 (thirteen years ago)
a lot of people just send stuff off to be mastered which is imo insane.
mastering engineers seem to actively discourage attended sessions though?
― keef qua keef (Jordan), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:46 (thirteen years ago)
in the 70s people would return defective stuff to stores and the stores would sell the returns to middlemen/the mob and the middlemen/the mob would just reseal them and sell them back to stores as dollar bin stuff. everyone was happy.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:47 (thirteen years ago)
I was responding to his claim that "The music industry wants us to worship the LP rather than the single in order to draw more money out of us, and the esteem within which vinyl is held is a part of this mythology." I disagree with that and I'm arguing that the music industry wants us to focus on the album rather than the single because it's the only way that selling records can be a viable business. It sort of is either/or, because the question is whether or not a singles-oriented industry can really survive if album sales continue to plummet and the price of music stays at an all time low. And if not, I don't think mythologizing the album is some kind of greedy, nefarious conspiracy.
You really think that $4 CD singles could compete with free downloads? Napster started in '99 and iTunes in 2001 so I don't think the industry was that far behind the situation.
― wk, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:48 (thirteen years ago)
also i'm seeing more instances where the vinyl master is used as the digital master too, probably because people don't want to have to pay extra for different versions (and there's no way of getting around the vinyl master if that's what you're putting out), and because the vinyl master sounds good. i know that's true of some friends' records on Not Not Fun for ex.
― keef qua keef (Jordan), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:49 (thirteen years ago)
i was shocked on the beatles thread re a comment as to a lot of mispressings re the recent vinyl boxset.given the premium price and flagship product status, i would have thought emi et al would have pulled out all the stops to make sure this one hit the audiophile spot.clearly this wasn't the case, and i suspect the point re the lack of pressing plants is a key factor here ..
given the upsurge in demand for vinyl, have any new pressing plants opened, or, is the industry still relying on remainders of the old network ?
― mark e, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:49 (thirteen years ago)
i think existing place have started running more shifts, like night shifts and stuff, heard something about some eastern european new plants supposedly coming online
― downton arby (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:53 (thirteen years ago)
"to focus on the album rather than the single because it's the only way that selling records can be a viable business"
selling singles was a viable business for decades. i still think it could be. if you could buy a taylor swift cd single at the check-out line at a grocery store for 2 or 3 bucks i would totally buy one. i love singles! and i'm not the only one. they just took the option away! there was no choice involved. that's what sucks about it.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:54 (thirteen years ago)
i'm seeing more instances where the vinyl master is used as the digital master too
yeah this happens. because vinyl mastered versions do tend to sound better, aren't brickwalled etc
― Welcome to my world of proses (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:55 (thirteen years ago)
quality would almost have to be lower with pressing plants. everyone who was good at it went out of business or died years ago. need some hipster record pressers. stop making candles, make quality records.
and enough with the heavy vinyl. would buy more new stuff if people would just do regular normal weight record pressings and charged me 15 bucks. this 30 dollars for a new album thing is crazy.
― scott seward, Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:56 (thirteen years ago)
stop making candles, make quality records
kinda surprised this hasn't happened actually. seems like so much of the vinyl on the market is pressed in like one of a couple places in eastern europe iirc
― Welcome to my world of proses (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:57 (thirteen years ago)
when i was shopping around for my last record i was surprised by how many U.S. plants there were to choose from! i think a lot of new places have opened in the last few years.
― keef qua keef (Jordan), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:58 (thirteen years ago)
180g records just makes shipping cost more nevermind the lp costing more too.
― pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Thursday, 7 February 2013 20:58 (thirteen years ago)
Throws off my vta too. So important.
― that Django got me Nuages (Sufjan Grafton), Thursday, 7 February 2013 21:00 (thirteen years ago)
good news imho, Jordan!
xp
― Welcome to my world of proses (Shakey Mo Collier), Thursday, 7 February 2013 21:00 (thirteen years ago)