Cape Argus

Vinyl: what goes around…

Hot wax’s back in the groove as LP celebrates 70 years of fun

- Marie-Louise Gumuchian

IN THE BASEMENT of the British Library, curator Andy Linehan inspects the latest addition to a massive archive of wax cylinders, cassettes, LPs and CDs – a vinyl record that made musical history.

Released in the US in 1948, Mendelssoh­n’s Concerto in E minor, performed by violinist Nathan Milstein with the New York Philharmon­ic Symphony Orchestra, was the first vinyl LP, or long-playing record.

The 12 inch, 33¹/³ rpm format allowed longer pieces to be recorded, changing the way listeners enjoyed their music. “The fact that the long-playing record came into existence was a huge step for music sound recording and for the listener,” Linehan, curator of popular music in the British Library sound archive, said.

“Previously you could only get three minutes or so on to one side of a record and then, because you had a narrower groove and a slower speed, you could get up to 20minutes, which meant you could get a whole classical piece on one side of a record… you could get a whole package of songs together on one record.”

Last Thursday marked 70 years since Columbia Records introduced the LP, and British music retailer HMV and label Sony Classical recreated 500 copies of the concerto to give away to fans, with one replica donated to the British Library’s archive.

The record adds to the library’s collection of 250000 LPs, usually commercial releases in Britain, and artefacts going back to the beginning of sound recording, such as wax cylinders, patented by Thomas Edison in 1877, the first way fans could buy music to listen to at home.

The anniversar­y comes at a time when vinyl has been enjoying a revival. In Britain, while it still only accounting for 7% of album sales, it draws fans of all ages.

According to the British Phonograph­ic Industry (BPI), vinyl LP sales rose to 4.1 million last year from 205 292 in 2007.

“Vinyl is popular because people see it more as artefact than utility,” Gennaro Castaldo, BPI communicat­ions director, said. “They love the whole ritual around buying it and then playing it at home; and also the sound quality is much warmer and richer, and people appreciate that.”

Rock remains the best selling vinyl genre and last year, the biggest seller on the format in Britain was Ed Sheeran’s Divide album.

“Our record stores are stocking more vinyl than we’ve ever stocked in terms of the last 10 years,” Simon Winter, PR and events manager at HMV, said.

At the flagship HMV store on Oxford Street, in London, music aficionado­s buying vinyl records said they appreciate­d its sound quality. “I grew up with mom and dad listening to a lot of Meat Loaf and a lot of heavy metal and rock and roll… and a lot of that was done on vinyl,” Steve Pound said. “That recording is just very unique.”

 ??  ?? SHELF LIFE: Andy Linehan with the British Library’s musical collection.
SHELF LIFE: Andy Linehan with the British Library’s musical collection.
 ?? PICTURES: REUTERS ?? STANDING TALL: Vinyl LP album record sleeve spines archived at the British Library’s musical collection in London.
PICTURES: REUTERS STANDING TALL: Vinyl LP album record sleeve spines archived at the British Library’s musical collection in London.
 ??  ?? GROOVY: A reflection of violinist Nathan Linehan on the playing surface of a limited edition pressing of Mendelssoh­n’s Violin Concerto in E Minor 1948.
GROOVY: A reflection of violinist Nathan Linehan on the playing surface of a limited edition pressing of Mendelssoh­n’s Violin Concerto in E Minor 1948.
 ??  ?? MAGIC: An example of a wax cylinder classical recording from the 1870s – a precursor to the vinyl record format.
MAGIC: An example of a wax cylinder classical recording from the 1870s – a precursor to the vinyl record format.
 ??  ?? BOXED SET: A box of wax cylinder classical recordings from the 1870s.
BOXED SET: A box of wax cylinder classical recordings from the 1870s.

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