In all, the number of records sold last year leapt from 988,000 in ‘07 to 1.88 million in ‘08. Still, the sales from vinyl only made up 0.1 percent of the music sales in 2008, a year that saw a 14 percent decrease across the board.
So, why is a dated medium starting to rival something that was considered vital and high-tech ten to fifteen years ago? Of many reasons stated (such as pure nostalgia), it could be anything from interest in wider album art layouts to arguments in the quality of sound compared to varying bit rates of MP3s. Prices can be remarkably low if certain recordings are sought in the right place. Used Dark Side vinyls can run the gamut to less than $10 while the right store could get you decent tags for recent releases (e.g. Metallica’s Death Magnetic or Radiohead’s In Rainbows).
What a confused market we deal in where Abbey Road is still a chart topping release (the 2nd most successful vinyl release of ’08) and modes of music that fifty-somethings gave up on decades ago come back fighting. If anything, it’s exciting and as vinyl becomes a more relevant source of music, one wonders whether or not we can expect to see turntable competitions making comebacks also.
Anyone for a ride on the Run DMC rhythm express?