Penticton Herald

Cassette tapes rolling again on Canadian music scene

Digital sales dipped last year, but tape sales were up 79%

- By The Canadian Press

TORONTO — Tyson Wiebe firmly believes the audio cassette hasn’t been played out. Many, many years after most music fans tossed their tapes in the trash, the Lethbridge, Alta., musician got behind the dated format in a big way — by forming an independen­t record label intent on resurrecti­ng the cassette.

Through production runs of 100 copies, Wiebe hopes to convince more homegrown artists that releasing tapes makes sense in 2017. He sees it as a way for musicians to stand apart in the age of streaming music, and get more people to actually play a full album.

“It sounds great to us and it’s a lot more inexpensiv­e than doing something like vinyl,” said the founder of Norwegian Blue Records.

“You go to any indie rock show right now, anybody worth their salt is starting to put a tape out.”

As physical and digital sales dwindled last year in Canada, sales of cassettes were on the upswing.

About 7,000 tapes were bought in 2016, which represente­d a yearover-year spike of 79 per cent, according to Nielsen Music Canada. While it’s not a huge volume, the figure was enough to give some in the music industry a shred of hope for a new revenue stream.

“When you’re a touring band you need something that can get you to the next town,” said Wiebe. “For us it’s huge.”

For some listeners, the lo-fi format never really died.

Punk and hardcore music fans, in particular, clung onto cassettes — saying the format’s audio hisses and distortion gave texture to songs.

But a few years ago, the cassette began to make its way beyond the fringes of the music scene.

Marvel’s 2014 summer blockbuste­r Guardians of the Galaxy helped drag the tape back into the conversati­on with a soundtrack of classic rock hits that topped the charts. Helped by a special cassette release designed to look like a throwback mixtape, it became the top-selling tape in both 2015 and 2016 in the United States.

Whether people were actually listening to the tapes isn’t so clear.

One of the biggest hurdles in embracing the cassette trend is finding a way to play them. Decades of declutteri­ng have left many households without a good player. Few hung on to their Walkman, the smaller portable players that were once so commonplac­e.

Some bands question the merits of encouragin­g fans to go backwards to a technology that many listeners considered faulty in the first place. Cassettes were hindered by problems like wearing out, getting eaten by tape decks and melting in hot cars.

Vancouver rockers Japandroid­s raised an eyebrow when their former record label pushed out their albums Post-Nothing and Celebratio­n Rock on tape.

“I think we both found it a bit baffling,” said drummer David Prowse.

But his bandmate, Brian King, fondly recalls some fans enjoying the initial novelty.

“People wanted them, or at least some people did,” he said. “I’m not exactly sure . . . if they’re actually listening to them.”

Other indie labels have seized the opportunit­y, including Toronto-based Dine Alone Records — one of the country’s most enthusiast­ic tape supporters. Dozens of their artists have albums on tape, including City and Colour, the Sheepdogs and Alexisonfi­re.

There is a catch to the recent sales renaissanc­e. Like vinyl records, many cassettes are packaged with download codes that let anyone enjoy the music on their computer or phone.

Tom Howie, half of Vancouverr­aised electronic duo Bob Moses, isn’t betting on tapes finding widespread popularity again.

“The resurgence of cassettes is solely an offshoot of hipster culture,” he said, “but it’s a cool marketing strategy. Everyone wants something they can’t get.”

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