Back on record the reasons behind vinyl s unlikely comeback april 17 2015 1 24am edt.
Why is vinyl back.
Record production has set a record and made a comeback in 2017.
But as 2018 begins the business and culture of vinyl stand at an unlikely juncture.
You ve undoubtedly heard it before.
The famed vinyl revival.
The vinyl albums have been selling a little bit more and a little bit more and now it s kind of steamrolled.
Here are five possible reasons why vinyl is making a comeback.
When you pick up your design with your transfer tape some of the backing rips off and stays on the back of the vinyl.
The past five or six years have seen the real boom with vinyl sales in the country and around the world absolutely thriving.
After a 28 year hiatus sony announced that it was bringing back vinyl records.
It s been reviving for quite a few years now to the point where we can just about call it revived.
The analogue format made of polyvinyl chloride had been the main vehicle for the commercial distribution of pop music from the 1950s until the 1980s and 1990s when they were largely replaced by the compact disc cd.
Your decal for a customer will not weed cleanly off the backing paper.
Try lightening up your pressure of your cut.
Record sales have been on the rise since 93.
As record store day shows there s a lot more to the vinyl revival than simple nostalgia.
The vinyl revival is the renewed interest and increased sales of vinyl records or gramophone records that has been taking place in the western world since about 2007.
Nielsen music reports that vinyl sales for 2017 reached their highest level since 1991 with around 14 million records sold in the united states.
Sony brings back vinyl.
Over the past few years analog goods including physical books board games and of course vinyl records have experienced a surprising resurgence despite the fact that these technologies are.
You are cutting too deep.
Your vinyl is not peeling cleanly from the paper backing.
Remember when compact discs better known as cds put the vinyl record industry out of business in the 1990s.
Yet it s still here and still growing.
The company decided that the cumbersome pieces of plastic were rendered obsolete by the cassette player and cd.
A couple of decades later vinyl is finally get.
Vinyl has been consigned to the garbage heap of history more than once.