When the first 12″ vinyl record was issued in 1948, did any record labels expect that this format would still be in use nearly 80 years later? The death of the 33rpm disc has been predicted many times, based on industry events and cultural trends that were expected to render vinyl albums obsolete. Music cassettes, CDs, MiniDiscs, mp3s, 7″ 45rpm singles, home-taping, downloads and streaming were all seen as existential threats to albums. Yet, despite reaching near extinction in the 1990s, vinyl albums (both new releases and back catalogue) are currently enjoying something of a revival.
This resurgence of interest in albums can be attributed to several factors: baby boomers reliving their youth; Gen X/Y/Z watching shows like “Stranger Things”; the box set, reissue and collector market; retro fashion trends; and a desire for all things analogue, tactile and physical (in contrast to the vapidity of streaming…).
Streaming has definitely changed the way many people listen to music, to the extent that albums have become deconstructed and fragmented thanks to shuffle, algorithms, recommender engines, playlists and a focus on one-off songs and collaborations by today’s popular artists. By contrast, most albums represent a considered and coherent piece of work: a selection of tracks designed and sequenced to be heard in a specific order, reflecting the artist’s creative intention or narrative structure. Streaming means that the artist’s work is being intermediated in a way that was not intended. You wouldn’t expect a novel, play or film to be presented in any old order – the author/playwright/director expects us to view the work as they planned. (OK, so there are some notable examples that challenge this convention, such as B.S.Johnson’s novel, “The Unfortunates” or the recent “Eno” documentary.)
Thankfully, classic albums are now being celebrated for their longevity, with significant anniversaries of an album’s release warranting deluxe reissues and live tours. This past weekend I went to two such events. The first was a concert by Black Cab, marking 10 years since the release of their album “Games Of The XXI Olympiad”. Appropriately, the show was the same day as the opening of the Paris Olympics, and the band started with a brief version of “Fanfare for the Common Man”. The second was part of the 30th anniversary tour for “Dream it Down”, the third album by the Underground Lovers. As well as getting most of the original band members together, the concert also featured Amanda Brown, formerly of The Go-Betweens, and who played on the album itself. (Also on stage was original percussionist, Derek Yuen – whose day job is designing shoes for the Australian Olympic team…)
It’s hard to imagine we will be celebrating the date when an artist first dropped a stream on Spotify….!
[This year also marks the 40th anniversary of the release of “Pink Frost”, the break-through single by The Chills, New Zealand’s finest musical export. So it was sad to read of the recent passing of their founder, Martin Phillipps. The Chills were one of many Antipodean bands that always seemed to be playing in London in the late 1980s, often to much larger audiences than they enjoyed at home. Their classic early singles and EPs are once again available on vinyl. Do yourself a favour, as someone once said!]
Next week: A postscript on AI