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Vinyl : The Analogue Record in the Digital Age - Ian Woodward

Vinyl

The Analogue Record in the Digital Age

By: Ian Woodward, Dominik Bartmanski

Paperback | 1 December 2014 | Edition Number 1

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Vinyl, a contemporary cultural icon, is brought to life through case studies, stories and interviews from buyers, makers, musicians and record producers across the world.

The last few years has seen not just a revival but a rebirth of the analogue record. Much more than merely a nostalgic craze, vinyl has become a cultural icon. While vinyl never ceased to be the key format for many music lovers and DJs, for two decades the recording industry perceived it as outdated, consigned to dusty domestic spaces and obscure record shops. Yet the seemingly obsolete vinyl has become the fastest growing medium in music sales.

The vinyl record is now a symbol of urban cool and authenticity; a signifier of a serious, immersive approach to production and consumption of music; an emblematic object of alternative cultures linked to dance and music epicentres in bohemian neighborhoods of global cities and a politically charged mode of opposition to ubiquitous digital music and listening practices.

Using a cultural sociology framework combined with insights from material and visual culture studies, Dominik Bartmanski and Ian Woodward present vinyl as a multifaceted cultural object and explore the reasons for its persistence within technologically accelerated cultures. The book is informed by media analysis, urban ethnography and interviews with musicians, DJs, record store owners, boutique label chiefs and collectors within a range of urban centres renowned for thriving music scenes, including Melbourne, London, New York, Tokyo and Berlin.

About the Author

Dominik Bartmanski is a postdoctoral research fellow at the Sociology Department of Masaryk University in Brno, Czech Republic.

Ian Woodward is Associate Professor of Sociology in the School of Humanities and Deputy Director of the Centre for Cultural Research at Griffith University, Australia.
Industry Reviews

"A passionate ode to the analogue record, and testament to how vinyl embodies the content it mediates, with each record's unique journey etched into the material - The Times Higher Education - Hillegonda C. Rietveld

Bartmanski and Woodward have created a masterpiece that any record lover should have on their shelves - Record Collector magazine

Vinyl is a state-of-the-art treatment of an unforgettable object and medium that raises many of the issues central to contemporary anthropology. Its subject-matter should make it appealing to students and general audiences, while its theoretical sophistication makes it relevant to scholars of music, technology, popular culture, and cultural objects. - Anthropology Review Database - Jack David Eller

Although there have been some attempts in a similar direction ... Bartmanski's and Woodward's book stands out by providing a refreshing perspective on contemporary vinyl culture informed by cultural sociology and material culture studies ... the book is a stimulating in-depth study of a central part of contemporary vinyl culture which complements extant studies on record collectorship and the history of the analogue record. It will be of interest to students and scholars with an interest in auditory and material culture as well as vinyl fans - or those who want to become such. - Information, Communication & Society - Anne-Kathrin Hoklas

Bartmanski and Woodward ... provide meticulous detail as to how materiality matters ... Bartmanski and Woodward divide their book into chapters that fervently trace various aspects of vinyl: its history, its functionality and use as a medium, its production and physical properties, and its consumption. In each chapter, they attend to the materially mediated cultural meanings within which vinyl is entangled. - Qualitative Sociology - Robin Bartram

[This] book has much to recommend it. The authors have a fine grasp of the complex and overlapping issues that are involved in establishing vinyl's status as a 'special object' ... [A] fascinating analysis of the format's 'meaningful circulation'. - Popular Music

Picking up the story from a cultural and sociological angle, Ian Woodward and Dominik Bartmanski have written what might well be the first modern history of the humble vinyl record since its exponential surge back into the public imagination. - The Vinyl Factory

Vinyl is an essential study of a residual technology's new lives and meanings in the digital age. ... The book is written with love for vinyl records, their aesthetics and the forms of social life they foster. ... [A] vital work to spin, mix and play off. - IASPM@ Journal

This study is a very insightful and informative contribution to the emerging literature on vinyl ... [Bartmanski and Woodward] combine a cultural sociological approach with insights from material cultural studies, supporting and illustrating their theoretical discussion with frequently fascinating material from interviews. ... A fascinating and instructive study. - Anthropos

What has been going on in the cities during the last 5 or 6 years to lead 20- to 50-year-old people to purchase vinyl LPs, instead of CDs, in stores and venues for retail, leisure, learning, and entertainment, and what human desires are satisfied by collecting LPs? ... Hearing music is not enough, the authors suggest, and many younger people (especially those who can't read notated scores) yearn to hold their music in their hands ... Bartmanski and Woodward's Vinyl is a work of sociology. It is to their credit that the epilogue affirms their training and practice as sociologists, and that my last impression of them is as sturdy academics. - Association for Recorded Sound Collections Journal - Alyssa Barna, Eastman School of Music

Bartmanski and Woodward have written an impassioned book that will surely resonate with analogue enthusiasts and that may even inspire new vinyl diggers. For sociologists interested in the materiality of cultural objects, the status of vinyl in Berlin's electronic music scene represents a compelling example. - Contemporary Sociology - Vaughn Schmutz, University of North Carolina-Charlotte, USA

Excerpted - PopMatters

Featured in 'Ubiquitous Grooves: A Vinyl Obituary' - Popmatters"

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