I have a nephew who bought an lp a few years ago at Barnes and Noble and was shocked when he discovered that he couldn't play it on his computer
All Stocked Up and Nowhere To Play
50% of record buyers have no way to play them.
84% of revenues comes from streaming.
I weep for mankind’s future… | |
I'm very skeptical of the Luminate study. I have a hard time believing that 50% of record buyers don't have a turntable. With the exception of mahler123's nephew, who thought that he could play the record he bought, has anyone here ever known of someone who bought records without owning a turntable? I'll even accept 2nd hand stories. So let's do our own poll. Does anyone have any firsthand knowledge that would indicate that this is true? I think this piece of news probably falls under the category of "don't believe everything you read on the internet." | |
My 21 year old daughter bought a couple records by one of her favorite artists a couple years back. She has an inexpensive player and I have several. She keeps them as collectors items but has never played them. She streams these all the time though on Spotify. A framed album makes a very cost effective piece of wall art. I do that all the time. I’ve owned records for 50+ years and still play them so I can convert them to digital and stream. Assuming it’s some thing I must be able to listen to and it’s not on Qobuz. | |
In a sense it’s fortunate that many do not play their records. Records get damaged easily and most people are ill prepared to handle them properly. That has always been the case but in the past records were the way to be able to hear the music you wanted so it didn’t matter. Now everything is available on streaming services. Much better! As long as what you must hear is provided by the service. | |
In defense of the tableless people who bought vinyl; 12 inch LP's also represent an artform that went away when CD's took over. Even though I mostly listen to CD's these days, it always depresses me a bit when I think about enjoying a nice gatefold album while listening to the music. My guess is that these people look forward to affording a turntable sometime down the road. The price tag of the new LP's will keep them in the poorhouse for a while however. | |
Not too long ago an individual at a workplace had been informed that I was a user of vinyl and they approached me on the subject. What did I learn, I now know there is a growing number of Vinyl Collectors who keep the LP in the Cellophane. They add the copies owned to Discography and track the Capitol Growth of their collection, this is a Tangible Property and is a equivalent to other currencies being invested in. I have recently heard performers are getting the hard media interest to gain further momentum by signing copies of their merch'. I once experienced something like this, I wanted to purchase a recently released Album and when going to pull the trigger, could not find it for sale. When it reappeared once more it was selling for £600. I'm lucky it wasn't a signed copy, who knows what the asking price would be. | |
I think we may be overthinking this just a bit when we communicate the benefits of vinyl to the uninitiated. For example, if we'd stop referring to record changers as "electro-mechanically engineeered record sequencer and retrieval systems"' and just refer to them as "record players" we might earn more Gen Z participation? | |
Given the choices on the $ range of tables offered to the GenZs' and the prices of current LPs', collecting albums does make sense...even if not to us. I do have my clot of LPs' that get played upon occasion....although they serve as more of a memory trigger than as much else. *S* On-line doesn't require anti-stat moves and all that...;) |