Music Information

Is the Record Album Dead? Not by a Long Shot


In 1982, Sony and Philips introduced the compact disc, a digital music playback format that used a laser to read the disc. The compact disc was expected to quickly replace the long play record album (LP) that Columbia had introduced in 1949. The product took off quickly, even at a retail price that was nearly double that of a record album, and sales of record albums plummeted. The CD, as compact discs quickly became known, offered what audio magazines called "perfect sound forever" while offering immunity to the effects of the wear and tear that often left records noisy. The record companies reduced the price of manufacture through improved production methods, and the cost of manufacturing a CD soon fell below that of manufacturing a record. Even so, compact discs continued to sell well at the higher price, making the CD quite a profitable product, indeed.

In order to maximize their profits, the record companies decided to phase out the phonograph record. They told their retailers that they would no longer accept returns on defective albums. This caused many retailers to stop stocking records altogether, and the record album had more or less disappeared from the market by 1990. And then something strange happened. The record began to make a comeback. Sparked by a few artists that demanded that their record companies issue their product in record form, the LP never quite went away. New albums by bands such as Pink Floyd and Metallica were issued in the mid-1990's in LP form, and those releases not only sold out, but now command a hefty premium on the collector's market. A number of independent bands that were signed by small record companies began to issue records in addition to CDs, partly just to be "different" and partly because the band members just liked listening to records. In some cases, in order to spur sales of the record, artists would include an extra song or two on the record that was not included on the compact disc of the same album. Throughout the 1990's and to the present day, several million record albums have been sold every year.

Granted, records are harder to find in stores than they were fifteen years ago, and an interested buyer might have to seek out a collector's shop or buy them online. But new albums by major and minor artists, along with older, "classic" albums, continue to be released in the LP format. Last year, in Japan, EMI Records issued every album by the Beatles in LP form as limited edition items. They sold out quickly, even at nearly $500 for the set. The market for records is smaller than it used to be, but the record album still thrives.

©Copyright 2005 by Retro Marketing.

Charles Essmeier is the owner of Retro Marketing, a firm that operates several retail Websites, including AluminumChristmasTrees.net, a site devoted to vintage aluminum Christmas trees and accessories, and RarePinkFloyd.com, a site devoted to rare records, compact discs and memorabilia by the band Pink Floyd.


MORE RESOURCES:

Wis. girl dies at Detroit Lakes music festival
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - 46 minutes ago
For the second year in a row, a person has died during the 10000 Lakes music festival near Detroit Lakes. Becker County Sheriff Tim Gordon says a ...


Michael: Music helped my depression
The Press Association - 8 hours ago
It is his first tour in the US in 17 years and the 45-year-old pop star told Good Morning America it was his music which got him through the years of ...


Times Online

On music: Judge Judy
guardian.co.uk, UK - Jul 24, 2008
Then there's British Sea Power's Do You Like Rock Music? This is the third album by the Brighton-based band, and another example of a group shifting up the ...
Mercury Music Prize - sing when you're winning Independent
EG MUSIC: NOTTINGHAM DJ AND NATIONWIDE MERCURY PRIZE JUDGE DEAN ... This is Nottingham
Burial Favourite In Mercury Music Prize Betting Odds OLBG Betting News
Times Online - Manchester Online
all 272 news articles


Is LA county the new center of the white power music industry?
Los Angeles Times, CA - 7 hours ago
"This is the center of the `white power' music industry, right here in Los Angeles," said Amanda Susskind, director of the Pacific Southwest region of the ...


Report: MySpace could work with Amazon on music service
CNET News, CA - 9 hours ago
Amazon.com could become the e-commerce engine behind the MySpace Music service expected to launch in September, according to a report on TechCrunch. ...
Amazon, Apple may back MySpace Music Electronista
Amazon To Power Upcoming MySpace Music Downloads TechCrunch
all 4 news articles


LA Times Music Blog
Los Angeles Times, CA - 5 hours ago
Curated by music supervisor and KCRW DJ Chris Douridas, the compilation segues from melancholic beauty like Patrick Watson’s “The Great Escape,” Cat ...


BBC News

Lil' Wayne faces copyright claim
BBC News, UK - 9 hours ago
US rapper Lil' Wayne has been sued by a music publishing company over claims he released a version of Rolling Stones song Play With Fire without permission. ...
Lil Wayne Sued By Rolling Stones Publisher Over 'Playing With Fire' MTV.com
The CB Music Friday Flash For 07/26/08 Cinema Blend
Lil Wayne faces lawsuit guardian.co.uk
MTV UK - Reuters
all 75 news articles


Yahoo Becomes Latest Site to Mute Music Purchases
Washington Post, United States - 8 hours ago
The e-mail Yahoo sent out yesterday to customers of its Yahoo Music online store could not have surprised anybody who's been following the music-download ...


Music review: Brahms shakes up Mozart festival
San Francisco Chronicle,  USA - 1 hour ago
... Brahms came on the scene, the first movement sounded muscular and arresting, with Demidenko and Cleve sharing an aptly tempestuous view of the music. ...


Maria von Trapp returns to home that inspired The Sound of Music
Telegraph.co.uk, United Kingdom - 1 hour ago
Seventy years after fleeing the Nazis, a 93-year-old woman whose family was immortalised in "The Sound of Music" has returned to Austria to visit her former ...

Music - Google News

home | site map
© 2006