But the market largely ignored them. Record labels shuttered their LP
pressing plants, except for a few that pressed mostly dance music, since
vinyl remained the medium of choice for D. J.s.
As it turned out, that early resistance was not futile, thanks largely
to an audience of record collectors, many born after CDs were introduced
in the 1980s.
These days, every major label and many smaller ones are releasing vinyl,
and most major new releases have a vinyl version, leading to a spate of
new pressing plants.
When the French electronica duo Daft Punk
released “Random Access Memories” in mid-May, 6 percent of its
first-week sales — 19,000 out of 339,000 — were on vinyl, according to
Nielsen SoundScan, which measures music sales.
Other groups with a predominantly college-age audience have had similar
success: the same week, the National sold 7,000 vinyl copies of its
latest album, “Trouble Will Find Me,” and 10,000 Vampire Weekend fans
opted for the LP version of “Modern Vampires of the City.”
When the Front Bottoms, a New Jersey indie band, posted a photo of their players carrying stacks of LP mailing boxes on their Facebook page
recently, their label, Bar/None, racked up what Glenn Morrow, who owns
the label, described as “phone orders for $2,000 worth of LPs in 10
minutes.”
A growing number of classic albums — including the complete Beatles and early Rolling Stones and Bob Dylan catalogs — have had vinyl reissues in recent years as well.
Michael Fremer, who monitors the LP world on his Web site, Analogplanet.com, said: “None of these companies are pressing records to feel good. They’re doing it because they think they can sell.”
About a dozen pressing plants have sprouted up in the United States,
along with the few that survived from the first vinyl era, and they say
business is so brisk that they are working to capacity.
Thomas Bernich, who started Brooklyn Phono in 2000, says his company makes about 440,000 LPs a year, but a giant like Rainbo Records, in Canoga Park, Calif., turns out 6 million to 7.2 million, said Steve Sheldon, its general manager.
One plant, Quality Record Pressings,
in Salina, Kan., opened in 2011 after its owner, Chad Kassem, grew
impatient with delays at a larger plant where his own line of blues
reissues was being pressed. His company, which runs four presses —
acquired used, but modified to run more efficiently — now makes LPs for
all the majors, and lists Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton and Nirvana
reissues among its recent projects. He is currently pressing 900,000
vinyl discs a year.
“We’ve always had more work than we could do,” Mr. Kassem said. “When we
had one press, we had enough orders for two. When we had two, we had
enough orders for four. We never spent a dollar on advertising, but
we’ve been busy from the day we opened.”
There is a limit to how much the vinyl business can expand right now.
When it seemed inevitable that CDs would supplant LPs, the companies
that made vinyl presses shifted to making other kinds of machinery. The
last new press was built in 1982, so relatively recent start-ups like
Quality and Brooklyn Phono searched out used presses (the going rate is
about $25,000) and reconditioned them. Most plants have deals with local
machine shops to make replacement parts.
Some pressing plants have looked into commissioning or building new
presses but have found the cost prohibitive — as much as $500,000, said
Eric Astor of Furnace MFG in Fairfax, Va. “Since my partner also owns a
CD/DVD plant,” Mr. Astor said in an e-mail, “we’ve been testing using
the methods used in disc manufacturing to make a new breed of vinyl
record, but that R&D is slow going and not looking promising.”
How are LPs selling? That is a matter of dispute. David Bakula, Nielsen
SoundScan’s senior vice president of client development and insights,
said that his company tracked 4.6 million domestic LP sales
last year, an 18 percent increase over 2011, but still only 1.4 percent
of the total market, made up mostly of digital downloads (which are
increasing) and CDs (for which sales are declining). This year, Mr.
Bakula said, vinyl sales are on track to reach about 5.5 million.
But manufacturers, specialist retailers and critics argue that
SoundScan’s figures represent only a fraction of actual sales, perhaps
as little, Mr. Kassem and Mr. Astor said, as 10 to 15 percent. They say
that about 25 million vinyl discs were pressed in the United States last
year, and many more in Europe and Asia, including some destined for the
American market.
Mr. Bakula countered that manufacturers are speaking of the number of
discs made; SoundScan tracks how many were sold. But the manufacturers
argue that LPs, unlike CDs, are a one-way sale: labels do not accept
returns of unsold copies. Therefore labels and retailers are careful to
order only what they think they can sell. Moreover, LP jackets do not
consistently carry bar codes — Mr. Kassem, for one, leaves them off his
discs because, he said, “they’re ugly” — and therefore cannot be scanned
at the cash register. And many shops that sell LPs are independents
that do not report to SoundScan, although Mr. Bakula said his company
weights its figures to account for that.
There are other measures of the health of the field, including figures
from ancillary businesses. Heinz Lichtenegger, whose Vienna-based Audio
Tuning company produces the highly regarded Pro-Ject turntable, said in
an e-mail that his company sells 8,000 turntables a month. And Mr.
Fremer has sold 16,000 copies of a DVD, “21st Century Vinyl,” that shows users how to set up several turntable models.
Vinyl retailers are thriving as well. Mr. Kassem of Quality Record Pressings also runs Acoustic Sounds, which sells LPs as well as turntables and accessories, including cleaning machines and protective sleeves. Music Direct, a Chicago company that owns Mobile Fidelity Sound Lab, a storied audiophile label, has a similarly broad stock, including a selection of turntables that ranges from the $249 Music Hall USB-1 to the $25,000 Avid Acutus.
Josh Bizar, the company’s director of sales and marketing, said that
Music Direct sold 500,000 LPs and “thousands of turntables” last year.
And the buyers, Mr. Bizar said, are by no means boomer nostalgists.
“When you look at the sales for a group like Daft Punk,” he said,
“you’re seeing young kids collecting records like we did when we were
young.”
“We never expected the vinyl resurgence to become as crazy as it is,” he
said. “But it’s come full circle. We get kids calling us up and telling
us why they listen to vinyl, and when we ask them why they don’t listen
to CDs, they say, ‘CDs? My dad listens to CDs — why would I do that?’ ”
Source - New York Times
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