KEN-JENNINGS wrote:
If i could pick 5 records a month for less than or close to the same as what I spend now, with access to a huge catalog of music instead of having to piecemeal my collection through discog, local brick and mortar (which I do not mind at all), and sometimes other online retailers like ebay or amazon, i'd love that.
Increased demand will lead to increased production, which should lead to more access for indie publishers.
you'd think that would be the case, except hardly anyone makes vinyl presses anymore and they are hugely expensive to set-up and run (machines, operators, premises). brand new music today is mixed and mastered at studios kitted out in the tube 70s/solid state 80s and sent to be mass manufactured at vinyl plants that are easily 30-40 years old (a huge number of them are actually located in ex-soviet countries/places like the czech republic where the vinyl presses were preserved pretty well). i just don't think the technology will ever come back again at a sufficient scale/interest for people to invest in it.
the market and distribution for books is inherently bigger/easier. the economies of scale are much more kind. small independents basically make no money on vinyl records – they're pressing 500–2,000 maybe of each record and using the physical copies as business cards for the more lucrative events/bookings side of the business.
Last edited by uziq (2019-05-16 10:52:12)