#46
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Weirdly enough a few artists have released stuff on cassette and a small (very small) number of cassette only record labels have sprung up. It's not been given the publicity that vinyl has, which perhaps goes back to your earlier point about the coverage. If enough places started saying "mate, there's a cassette revival on" then people would start to believe it. I think give the digital-ness of most music collections today, a cassette tape is the equivalent of an Easter egg hunt. You've got to jump through so many hoops to actually listen to it, that it's probably a thrill if all you've ever known is Spotify.
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“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.” L.P. Hartley |
#47
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What's interesting is, much like the "CDs are dead" thing, there have been a fair few articles about a cassette revival (here are just a few ...) yet it doesn't actually reflect reality. While an album like 2814's Rain Temple, from one of the most acclaimed cassette-based labels, sold 850 tapes on its day of release last year, which would have been enough to push it into the top 150 without the 1000+ LPs and CDs, had the label chosen to register with SoundScan, I've not come across any other small labels selling so many, and tapes still seem to be an outlier with bigger releases still. There are a bunch of releases which have had a cassette version in the last couple of years - Slowdive, Aphex Twin, Kanye West - but even Cassette Store Day (next week, people!) doesn't seem to have shaken off the novelty image the so-called revival seems to be having. So it's either off-the-radar micro-labels, or the occasional niche edition for a bigger release. They're still only selling in the tens and hundreds rather than the thousands and millions they'd need to to actually live up to any of the hype in those articles linked above. |
#48
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Blimey mate I stand corrected!
I think the same thing applies in a way to my earlier point about confirmation bias - or, "what you see is what there is." I did see a breakdown somewhere of the vinyl revival to reality. In isolation it looks impressive, but in the round it's basically peak niche for want of a better description. Of course, that does make for a good news story. But there's no denying that if you're in the midst of a revival or a new technology, the temptation to massively overstate the significance of that revival is hard to avoid (especially where vested interests are involved!)
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“The past is a foreign country: they do things differently there.” L.P. Hartley |
#49
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Apropos of nothing, I recall that when my local record shop (which is actually a high street multimedia retailer à la HMV rather than an independent record shop) stopped selling CD singles circa 2010, it was to use the space for a vinyl section.
As far as I know, it still doesn't sell cassettes.
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#50
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And yeah, I think Rough Trade is the only shop I've been in that sells cassettes in any amount. HMV have the occasional one in if it's a big release. There are only 16 shops across the UK taking part in Cassette Store Day. |
#51
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Indian Summer was the last CD single I walked into a shop and bought.
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#52
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And yet Together Forever or whatever it was called was available as a CD in HMV.
But I remember being able to buy PFAYM singles. |
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