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Wikipedia

LP record

The LP (from "long playing"[1] or "long play") is an analog sound storage medium, specifically a phonograph record format characterized by: a speed of 33+13 rpm; a 12- or 10-inch (30- or 25-cm) diameter; use of the "microgroove" groove specification; and a vinyl (a copolymer of vinyl chloride acetate) composition disk. Introduced by Columbia Records in 1948, it was soon adopted as a new standard by the entire US record industry and, apart from a few relatively minor refinements and the important later addition of stereophonic sound in 1957,[2] it remained the standard format for record albums, during a period in popular music known as the album era.[3] LP was originally a trademark of Columbia[4] and competed against the smaller 7-inch sized "45" or "single" format by RCA Victor, eventually ending up on top.[5] Today in the vinyl revival era, a large majority of records are based on the LP format and hence the LP name continues to be in use today to refer to new records.[6][7]

LP
A 12-inch LP vinyl record
Top: the original LP logo as used by Columbia Records
Media typeAudio playback
EncodingAnalog groove modulation
CapacityOriginally 23 minutes per side, later increased by several minutes, much longer possible with very low signal level
Read mechanismMicrogroove stylus (maximum tip radius 0.001 in or 25 μm)
Developed byColumbia Records
Dimensions12 in (30 cm), 10 in (25 cm), 90–240 g (3.2–8.5 oz)
UsageAudio storage
Released1948

Format advantages edit

At the time the LP was introduced, nearly all phonograph records for home use were made of an abrasive (and therefore noisy) shellac compound, employed a much larger groove, and played at approximately 78 revolutions per minute (rpm), limiting the playing time of a 12-inch diameter record to less than five minutes per side. The new product was a 12- or 10-inch (30 or 25 cm) fine-grooved disc made of PVC ("vinyl") and played with a smaller-tipped "microgroove" stylus at a speed of 33+13 rpm. Each side of a 12-inch LP could play for about 22 minutes.[8]

History edit

Despite some earlier experiments and attempts at commercial marketing, the Long Play format did not begin to enjoy commercial popularity until the early 1950s.[9]

Predecessors edit

Starting in 1926, the Edison Records company experimented with issuing Edison Disc Records in long play format of 24 minutes per side. The system and playback system (still mostly wind-up phonographs) proved unreliable and was a commercial failure.[10]

Soundtrack discs edit

 
Neumann lathe with SX-74 cutting head
 
Neumann lathe

By mid-1931 all motion picture studios were recording on optical soundtracks, but sets of soundtrack discs, mastered by dubbing from the optical tracks and scaled down to 12 inches to cut costs, were made as late as 1936 for distribution to theaters still equipped with disc-only sound projectors.[11]

Radio transcription discs edit

Unless the quantity required was very small, pressed discs were a more economical medium for distributing high-quality audio than tape, and CD mastering was, in the early years of that technology, very expensive, so the use of LP-format transcription discs continued into the 1990s. The King Biscuit Flower Hour is a late example, as are Westwood One's The Beatle Years and Doctor Demento programs, which were sent to stations on LP at least through 1992.[12]

RCA Victor edit

In September 1931, RCA Victor launched the first commercially available vinyl long-playing record, marketed as "Program-Transcription" records. These revolutionary discs were designed for playback at 33+13 rpm and pressed on a 30 cm diameter flexible plastic disc, with a duration of about ten minutes playing time per side.[13] Victor's early introduction of a long-playing record was a commercial failure for several reasons including the lack of affordable, consumer playback equipment and consumer rejection during the Great Depression.[14]

These "Program Transcription" discs, as Victor called them, played at 33+13 rpm and used a somewhat finer and more closely spaced groove than typical 78 rpm records. They were to be played with a special "Chromium Orange" chrome-plated steel needle. The 10-inch discs, mostly used for popular and light classical music, were normally pressed in shellac, but the 12-inch discs, mostly used for "serious" classical music, were pressed in Victor's new vinyl-based "Victrolac" compound, which provided a much quieter playing surface. These records could hold up to 15 minutes per side. Beethoven's Fifth Symphony, performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski, was the first 12-inch recording issued.[15][16][17] Compton Pakensham, reviewing the event in The New York Times wrote, "What we were not prepared for was the quality of reproduction ... incomparably fuller."[16]

Development of LP edit

CBS Laboratories head research scientist Peter Goldmark led Columbia's team to develop a phonograph record that would hold at least 20 minutes per side.[18] Although Goldmark was the chief scientist who selected the team, he delegated most of the experimental work to William S. Bachman, whom Goldmark had lured from General Electric, and Howard H. Scott.[19]

Research began in 1939, was suspended during World War II, and then resumed in 1945.[20] Columbia Records unveiled the LP at a press conference in the Waldorf Astoria on June 21, 1948, in two formats: 10 inches (25 centimetres) in diameter, matching that of 78 rpm singles, and 12 inches (30 centimetres) in diameter.[20][21][22] The initial release of 133 recordings were: 85 12-inch classical LPs (ML 4001 to 4085), 26 10-inch classics (ML 2001 to 2026), eighteen 10-inch popular numbers (CL 6001 to 6018), and four 10-inch juvenile records (JL 8001 to 8004). According to the 1949 Columbia catalog, issued September 1948, the first twelve-inch LP was Mendelssohn's Concerto in E Minor by Nathan Milstein on the violin with the New York Philharmonic, conducted by Bruno Walter (ML 4001). Three ten-inch series were released: 'popular', starting with the reissue of The Voice of Frank Sinatra (CL 6001); 'classical', numbering from Beethoven's 8th symphony (ML 2001), and 'juvenile', commencing with Nursery Songs by Gene Kelly (JL 8001). Also released at this time were a pair of 2-LP sets, Puccini's La Bohème (SL-1) and Humperdinck's Hansel and Gretel (SL-2). All 12-inch pressings were of 220 grams vinyl. Columbia may have planned for the Bach album ML 4002 to be the first since the releases came in alphabetical order by composer (the first 54 LPS, ML 4002 thru ML 4055, are in order from Bach to Tchaikovsky) Nathan Milstein was very popular in the 1940s, however, so his performance of the Mendelssohn concerto was moved to ML 4001.[23]

Public reception edit

When the LP was introduced in 1948, the 78 was the conventional format for phonograph records. By 1952, 78s still accounted for slightly more than half of the units sold in the United States, and just under half of the dollar sales. The 45, oriented toward the single song, accounted for just over 30% of unit sales and just over 25% of dollar sales. The LP represented not quite 17% of unit sales and just over 26% of dollar sales.[24]

Ten years after their introduction, the share of unit sales for LPs in the US was almost 25%, and of dollar sales 58%. Most of the remainder was taken up by the 45; 78s accounted for only 2% of unit sales and 1% of dollar sales.[25]

The popularity of the LP ushered in the "Album Era" of English-language popular music, beginning in the late 1950s, as performers took advantage of the longer playing time to create coherent themes or concept albums. "The rise of the LP as a form—as an artistic entity, as they used to say—has complicated how we perceive and remember what was once the most evanescent of the arts", Robert Christgau wrote in Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies (1981). "The album may prove a '70s totem—briefer configurations were making a comeback by decade's end. But for the '70s it will remain the basic musical unit, and that's OK with me. I've found over the years that the long-playing record, with its twenty-minute sides and four-to-six compositions/performances per side, suits my habits of concentration perfectly."[26]

Although the popularity of LPs (as well as the 45s) began to decline in the late 1970s with the advent of Compact Cassettes, and later compact discs,[27] the LP survives as a format to the present day. Vinyl LP records enjoyed a resurgence in popularity throughout the 2010s[28][29] and US vinyl sales in 2017[30] reached 15.6 million and 27 million for 2020.[31] In 2022, US vinyl sales reached 41 million units, surpassing sales of the Compact Disc for the first time since 1987, once again making the LP the highest selling physical format there.[32][33]

Competing formats edit

Reel-to-reel magnetic tape recorders posed a new challenge to the LP in the 1950s, but the higher cost of pre-recorded tapes was one of several factors that confined tape to a niche market. Cartridge and cassette tapes were more convenient and less expensive than reel-to-reel tapes, and they became popular for use in automobiles beginning in the mid-1960s. The LP was not seriously challenged as the primary medium for listening to recorded music at home until the 1970s, however, when the audio quality of the cassette was greatly improved by better tape formulations and noise-reduction systems. By 1983, cassettes were outselling LPs in the US.[34]

The Compact Disc (CD) was introduced in 1982. It offered a recording that was, theoretically, almost noiseless and not audibly degraded by repeated playing or slight scuffs and scratches. At first, the much higher prices of CDs and CD players limited their target market to affluent early adopters and audiophiles; but prices came down, and by 1988 CDs outsold LPs. The CD became the top-selling format, over cassettes, in 1992.[34]

Along with phonograph records in other formats, some of which were made of other materials, LPs are now widely referred to simply as "vinyl". Since the late 1990s there has been a vinyl revival.[35] Demand has increased in niche markets, particularly among audiophiles, DJs, and fans of indie music, but most music sales as of 2018 came from online downloads and online streaming because of their availability, convenience, and price.[31]

Playing time edit

With the advent of sound film or "talkies", the need for greater storage space made 33+13 rpm records more appealing. Soundtracks – played on records synchronized to movie projectors in theatres – could not fit onto the mere five minutes per side that 78s offered. When initially introduced, 12-inch LPs played for a maximum of about 23 minutes per side, 10-inch records for around 15.[citation needed] They were not an immediate success, however, as they were released during the height of the Great Depression, and seemed frivolous to the many impoverished of the time. It was not until "microgroove" was developed by Columbia Records in 1948 that Long Players (LPs) reached their maximum playtime, which has continued to modern times.[36]

Economics and tastes initially determined which kind of music was available on each format. Recording company executives believed upscale classical music fans would be eager to hear a Beethoven symphony or a Mozart concerto without having to flip over multiple, four-minute-per-side 78s, and that pop music fans, who were used to listening to one song at a time, would find the shorter time of the 10-inch LP sufficient. As a result, the 12-inch format was reserved solely for higher-priced classical recordings and Broadway shows. Popular music continued to appear only on 10-inch records.[citation needed] However, by the mid-1950s, the 10-inch LP, like its similarly sized 78 rpm cousin, lost the format war and was discontinued.[37]

Groove edit

The close spacing of the spiral groove that allowed more playing time on a 33+13 rpm microgroove LP also allowed a faint pre-echo of upcoming loud sounds. The cutting stylus unavoidably transferred some of the subsequent groove's signal to the previous groove. It was discernible by some listeners throughout certain recordings, and a quiet passage followed by a loud sound would allow anyone to hear a faint pre-echo of the loud sound 1.8 seconds ahead of time.[38]

Further advances in LP edit

 
 
LPs pressed in multicolored vinyl (Sotano Beat: A Todo Color, a various-artists compilation) and clear yellow vinyl – (Rock On Elvis by Tulsa McLean) both from Argentina.

The following are some significant advances in the format:

  • Helium-cooled cutting heads that could withstand higher levels of high frequencies (Neumann SX68); previously, the cutting engineer had to reduce the HF content of the signal sent to the record cutting head, otherwise the delicate coils could burn out
  • Elliptical stylus marketed by several manufacturers at the end of the 1960s
  • Cartridges that operate at lower tracking forces (2.0 grams / 20 mN), beginning from the mid-1960s
  • Half-speed and one-third-speed record cutting, which extends the usable bandwidth of the record
  • Longer-lasting, antistatic record compounds (e.g.: RCA Dynaflex, Q-540)
  • More advanced stylus tip shapes (Shibata, Van den Hul, MicroLine, etc.)
  • Direct metal mastering
  • Noise-reduction (CX encoding, dbx encoding), starting from 1973
  • In the 1970s, quadraphonic sound (four-channel) records became available in both discrete and matrix formats. These did not achieve the popularity of stereo records due to the expense of consumer playback equipment, competing and incompatible quad recording standards, and a lack of quality in quad-remix releases.[39]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Origin of LP". merriam-webster.com.
  2. ^ "The history of the LP".
  3. ^ Zipkin, Michele (April 8, 2020). "Best albums from the last decade, according to critics". Stacker. Retrieved June 3, 2020.
  4. ^ https://www.discogs.com/label/269353-Columbia-Records-Inc
  5. ^ Evans, Mike (2022). Vinyl: The Art of Making Records. p. 54. ISBN 9781645178163.
  6. ^ "Vinyl fans and traders tell of love for LPs as sales soar". BBC News. December 28, 2023. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
  7. ^ Sisario, Ben (October 21, 2021). "Vinyl Is Selling So Well That It's Getting Hard to Sell Vinyl". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved May 5, 2024.
  8. ^ "Full-length LP records on 150 and 180 gram vinyl". Standard Vinyl. Standard Vinyl. Retrieved December 18, 2018.
  9. ^ Keightley, Keir (2004). "Long Play: Adult-Oriented Popular Music and the Temporal Logics of the Post-War Sound Recording Industry in the USA". Media, Culture & Society. 26 (3): 379. doi:10.1177/0163443704042258. ISSN 0163-4437.
  10. ^ "The Edison Long-Playing Record". Regents of the University of California. Discography of American Historical Recordings. Retrieved 26 March 2023.
  11. ^ "Frequently Asked Questions". The Vitaphone Project. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
  12. ^ "Rand's Esoteric OTR: Types of transcriptions and radio recordings". Randsesotericotr.podbean.com. Retrieved August 12, 2011.
  13. ^ Cross, Alan. "Strange speeds, big holes, and other answers to vinyl record mysteries". from the original on January 22, 2022. Retrieved June 15, 2023.
  14. ^ Penndorf, Ron. . Archived from the original on November 5, 2005. Retrieved October 4, 2006.
  15. ^ "Phonograph Disks Run for Half-Hour". The New York Times. September 18, 1931. p. 48. from the original on June 22, 2022. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
  16. ^ a b Compton Pakenham (September 20, 1931). "Newly Recorded Music". The New York Times. p. X10. from the original on June 22, 2022. Retrieved June 22, 2022.
  17. ^ "Not So New" (PDF). The Billboard. June 5, 1948. p. 17. (PDF) from the original on January 27, 2021. Retrieved June 22, 2022 – via World Radio History.
  18. ^ Goldmark, Peter. Maverick inventor; My Turbulent Years at CBS. New York: Saturday Review Press, 1973.
  19. ^ Ben Sisario (October 6, 2012). "Howard H. Scott, a Developer of the LP, Dies at 92". The New York Times. Retrieved October 8, 2012. Howard H. Scott, who was part of the team at Columbia Records that introduced the long-playing vinyl record in 1948 before going on to produce albums with the New York Philharmonic, Glenn Gould, Isaac Stern and many other giants of classical music, died on Sept. 22 in Reading, Pa. He was 92. ...
  20. ^ a b "Columbia Diskery, CBS Show Microgroove Platters to Press; Tell How It Began" (PDF). Billboard. June 26, 1948. p. 3. (PDF) from the original on January 22, 2021. Retrieved June 22, 2022..
  21. ^ The First Long-Playing Disc Library of Congress (Congress.gov) (accessdate June 21, 2021)
  22. ^ Marmorstein, Gary. The Label: The Story of Columbia Records. New York: Thunder's Mouth Press; p. 165.
  23. ^ Columbia Record Catalog 1949 dated September 15, 1948
  24. ^ "78 Speed On Way Out; LP-45 Trend Gaining", The Billboard, August 2, 1952, p. 47.
  25. ^ Robert Shelton (March 16, 1958). "Happy Tunes on Cash Registers". The New York Times. p. XX14.
  26. ^ Christgau, Robert (1981). "The Criteria". Christgau's Record Guide: Rock Albums of the Seventies. Ticknor & Fields. ISBN 978-0899190259. Retrieved April 6, 2019 – via robertchristgau.com.
  27. ^ Perry, Mark (September 23, 2022). "Animated Chart of the Day: Recorded Music Sales by Format Share, 1973 to 2022". American Enterprise Institute. Retrieved February 7, 2024.
  28. ^ Kornelis, Chris (January 27, 2015). "Why CDs May Actually Sound Better Than Vinyl". L.A. Weekly.
  29. ^ 1 What a record! The UK album chart reaches its 1,000th No1... and counting, Express, Adrian Lee, November 26, 2013
  30. ^ "Infographic: The LP is Back!". Statista Infographics. Retrieved July 16, 2017.
  31. ^ a b RIAA 2018 Year-End Music Industry Revenue Report
  32. ^ "Vinyl records outsell CDs for first time in decades". BBC News. March 13, 2023. Retrieved June 28, 2023.
  33. ^ Beaumont-Thomas, Ben (September 14, 2020). "Vinyl records outsell CDs in US for first time since 1980s". The Guardian. ISSN 0261-3077. Retrieved January 25, 2024.
  34. ^ a b . riaa.com. Archived from the original on December 10, 1997. Retrieved December 31, 2016.
  35. ^ McGeehan, Patrick (December 7, 2009). "Vinyl Records and Turntables Are Gaining Sales". The New York Times. Retrieved May 11, 2010.
  36. ^ . The Sound of Vinyl Blog. June 12, 2017. Archived from the original on December 5, 2017.
  37. ^ "10 Inch Vinyl Records". Collectors Weekly. November 23, 2013. from the original on December 25, 2022. Retrieved March 30, 2023.
  38. ^ . Audacity Forum. Archived from the original (Forum Discussion) on June 9, 2009.
  39. ^ "Analog Quadraphonic Formats". Retrieved April 8, 2015.

External links edit

  • "Dreams of Vinyl: The Story of the LP Record" by Jac Holzman

record, this, article, about, vinyl, records, music, albums, general, album, long, play, long, player, redirect, here, other, uses, long, play, disambiguation, from, long, playing, long, play, analog, sound, storage, medium, specifically, phonograph, record, f. This article is about vinyl records For music albums in general see Album Long Play and Long Player redirect here For other uses see Long Play disambiguation The LP from long playing 1 or long play is an analog sound storage medium specifically a phonograph record format characterized by a speed of 33 1 3 rpm a 12 or 10 inch 30 or 25 cm diameter use of the microgroove groove specification and a vinyl a copolymer of vinyl chloride acetate composition disk Introduced by Columbia Records in 1948 it was soon adopted as a new standard by the entire US record industry and apart from a few relatively minor refinements and the important later addition of stereophonic sound in 1957 2 it remained the standard format for record albums during a period in popular music known as the album era 3 LP was originally a trademark of Columbia 4 and competed against the smaller 7 inch sized 45 or single format by RCA Victor eventually ending up on top 5 Today in the vinyl revival era a large majority of records are based on the LP format and hence the LP name continues to be in use today to refer to new records 6 7 LPA 12 inch LP vinyl recordTop the original LP logo as used by Columbia RecordsMedia typeAudio playbackEncodingAnalog groove modulationCapacityOriginally 23 minutes per side later increased by several minutes much longer possible with very low signal levelRead mechanismMicrogroove stylus maximum tip radius 0 001 in or 25 mm Developed byColumbia RecordsDimensions12 in 30 cm 10 in 25 cm 90 240 g 3 2 8 5 oz UsageAudio storageReleased1948 Contents 1 Format advantages 2 History 2 1 Predecessors 2 1 1 Soundtrack discs 2 1 2 Radio transcription discs 2 1 3 RCA Victor 2 2 Development of LP 2 3 Public reception 3 Competing formats 4 Playing time 5 Groove 6 Further advances in LP 7 See also 8 References 9 External linksFormat advantages editAt the time the LP was introduced nearly all phonograph records for home use were made of an abrasive and therefore noisy shellac compound employed a much larger groove and played at approximately 78 revolutions per minute rpm limiting the playing time of a 12 inch diameter record to less than five minutes per side The new product was a 12 or 10 inch 30 or 25 cm fine grooved disc made of PVC vinyl and played with a smaller tipped microgroove stylus at a speed of 33 1 3 rpm Each side of a 12 inch LP could play for about 22 minutes 8 History editSee also Album era Despite some earlier experiments and attempts at commercial marketing the Long Play format did not begin to enjoy commercial popularity until the early 1950s 9 Predecessors edit Starting in 1926 the Edison Records company experimented with issuing Edison Disc Records in long play format of 24 minutes per side The system and playback system still mostly wind up phonographs proved unreliable and was a commercial failure 10 Soundtrack discs edit nbsp Neumann lathe with SX 74 cutting head nbsp Neumann lathe By mid 1931 all motion picture studios were recording on optical soundtracks but sets of soundtrack discs mastered by dubbing from the optical tracks and scaled down to 12 inches to cut costs were made as late as 1936 for distribution to theaters still equipped with disc only sound projectors 11 Radio transcription discs edit Unless the quantity required was very small pressed discs were a more economical medium for distributing high quality audio than tape and CD mastering was in the early years of that technology very expensive so the use of LP format transcription discs continued into the 1990s The King Biscuit Flower Hour is a late example as are Westwood One s The Beatle Years and Doctor Demento programs which were sent to stations on LP at least through 1992 12 RCA Victor edit In September 1931 RCA Victor launched the first commercially available vinyl long playing record marketed as Program Transcription records These revolutionary discs were designed for playback at 33 1 3 rpm and pressed on a 30 cm diameter flexible plastic disc with a duration of about ten minutes playing time per side 13 Victor s early introduction of a long playing record was a commercial failure for several reasons including the lack of affordable consumer playback equipment and consumer rejection during the Great Depression 14 These Program Transcription discs as Victor called them played at 33 1 3 rpm and used a somewhat finer and more closely spaced groove than typical 78 rpm records They were to be played with a special Chromium Orange chrome plated steel needle The 10 inch discs mostly used for popular and light classical music were normally pressed in shellac but the 12 inch discs mostly used for serious classical music were pressed in Victor s new vinyl based Victrolac compound which provided a much quieter playing surface These records could hold up to 15 minutes per side Beethoven s Fifth Symphony performed by the Philadelphia Orchestra under Leopold Stokowski was the first 12 inch recording issued 15 16 17 Compton Pakensham reviewing the event in The New York Times wrote What we were not prepared for was the quality of reproduction incomparably fuller 16 Development of LP edit CBS Laboratories head research scientist Peter Goldmark led Columbia s team to develop a phonograph record that would hold at least 20 minutes per side 18 Although Goldmark was the chief scientist who selected the team he delegated most of the experimental work to William S Bachman whom Goldmark had lured from General Electric and Howard H Scott 19 Research began in 1939 was suspended during World War II and then resumed in 1945 20 Columbia Records unveiled the LP at a press conference in the Waldorf Astoria on June 21 1948 in two formats 10 inches 25 centimetres in diameter matching that of 78 rpm singles and 12 inches 30 centimetres in diameter 20 21 22 The initial release of 133 recordings were 85 12 inch classical LPs ML 4001 to 4085 26 10 inch classics ML 2001 to 2026 eighteen 10 inch popular numbers CL 6001 to 6018 and four 10 inch juvenile records JL 8001 to 8004 According to the 1949 Columbia catalog issued September 1948 the first twelve inch LP was Mendelssohn s Concerto in E Minor by Nathan Milstein on the violin with the New York Philharmonic conducted by Bruno Walter ML 4001 Three ten inch series were released popular starting with the reissue of The Voice of Frank Sinatra CL 6001 classical numbering from Beethoven s 8th symphony ML 2001 and juvenile commencing with Nursery Songs by Gene Kelly JL 8001 Also released at this time were a pair of 2 LP sets Puccini s La Boheme SL 1 and Humperdinck s Hansel and Gretel SL 2 All 12 inch pressings were of 220 grams vinyl Columbia may have planned for the Bach album ML 4002 to be the first since the releases came in alphabetical order by composer the first 54 LPS ML 4002 thru ML 4055 are in order from Bach to Tchaikovsky Nathan Milstein was very popular in the 1940s however so his performance of the Mendelssohn concerto was moved to ML 4001 23 Public reception edit When the LP was introduced in 1948 the 78 was the conventional format for phonograph records By 1952 78s still accounted for slightly more than half of the units sold in the United States and just under half of the dollar sales The 45 oriented toward the single song accounted for just over 30 of unit sales and just over 25 of dollar sales The LP represented not quite 17 of unit sales and just over 26 of dollar sales 24 Ten years after their introduction the share of unit sales for LPs in the US was almost 25 and of dollar sales 58 Most of the remainder was taken up by the 45 78s accounted for only 2 of unit sales and 1 of dollar sales 25 The popularity of the LP ushered in the Album Era of English language popular music beginning in the late 1950s as performers took advantage of the longer playing time to create coherent themes or concept albums The rise of the LP as a form as an artistic entity as they used to say has complicated how we perceive and remember what was once the most evanescent of the arts Robert Christgau wrote in Christgau s Record Guide Rock Albums of the Seventies 1981 The album may prove a 70s totem briefer configurations were making a comeback by decade s end But for the 70s it will remain the basic musical unit and that s OK with me I ve found over the years that the long playing record with its twenty minute sides and four to six compositions performances per side suits my habits of concentration perfectly 26 Although the popularity of LPs as well as the 45s began to decline in the late 1970s with the advent of Compact Cassettes and later compact discs 27 the LP survives as a format to the present day Vinyl LP records enjoyed a resurgence in popularity throughout the 2010s 28 29 and US vinyl sales in 2017 30 reached 15 6 million and 27 million for 2020 31 In 2022 US vinyl sales reached 41 million units surpassing sales of the Compact Disc for the first time since 1987 once again making the LP the highest selling physical format there 32 33 Competing formats editSee also Single music Reel to reel magnetic tape recorders posed a new challenge to the LP in the 1950s but the higher cost of pre recorded tapes was one of several factors that confined tape to a niche market Cartridge and cassette tapes were more convenient and less expensive than reel to reel tapes and they became popular for use in automobiles beginning in the mid 1960s The LP was not seriously challenged as the primary medium for listening to recorded music at home until the 1970s however when the audio quality of the cassette was greatly improved by better tape formulations and noise reduction systems By 1983 cassettes were outselling LPs in the US 34 The Compact Disc CD was introduced in 1982 It offered a recording that was theoretically almost noiseless and not audibly degraded by repeated playing or slight scuffs and scratches At first the much higher prices of CDs and CD players limited their target market to affluent early adopters and audiophiles but prices came down and by 1988 CDs outsold LPs The CD became the top selling format over cassettes in 1992 34 Along with phonograph records in other formats some of which were made of other materials LPs are now widely referred to simply as vinyl Since the late 1990s there has been a vinyl revival 35 Demand has increased in niche markets particularly among audiophiles DJs and fans of indie music but most music sales as of 2018 came from online downloads and online streaming because of their availability convenience and price 31 Playing time editWith the advent of sound film or talkies the need for greater storage space made 33 1 3 rpm records more appealing Soundtracks played on records synchronized to movie projectors in theatres could not fit onto the mere five minutes per side that 78s offered When initially introduced 12 inch LPs played for a maximum of about 23 minutes per side 10 inch records for around 15 citation needed They were not an immediate success however as they were released during the height of the Great Depression and seemed frivolous to the many impoverished of the time It was not until microgroove was developed by Columbia Records in 1948 that Long Players LPs reached their maximum playtime which has continued to modern times 36 Economics and tastes initially determined which kind of music was available on each format Recording company executives believed upscale classical music fans would be eager to hear a Beethoven symphony or a Mozart concerto without having to flip over multiple four minute per side 78s and that pop music fans who were used to listening to one song at a time would find the shorter time of the 10 inch LP sufficient As a result the 12 inch format was reserved solely for higher priced classical recordings and Broadway shows Popular music continued to appear only on 10 inch records citation needed However by the mid 1950s the 10 inch LP like its similarly sized 78 rpm cousin lost the format war and was discontinued 37 Groove editThe close spacing of the spiral groove that allowed more playing time on a 33 1 3 rpm microgroove LP also allowed a faint pre echo of upcoming loud sounds The cutting stylus unavoidably transferred some of the subsequent groove s signal to the previous groove It was discernible by some listeners throughout certain recordings and a quiet passage followed by a loud sound would allow anyone to hear a faint pre echo of the loud sound 1 8 seconds ahead of time 38 Further advances in LP edit nbsp nbsp LPs pressed in multicolored vinyl Sotano Beat A Todo Color a various artists compilation and clear yellow vinyl Rock On Elvis by Tulsa McLean both from Argentina The following are some significant advances in the format Helium cooled cutting heads that could withstand higher levels of high frequencies Neumann SX68 previously the cutting engineer had to reduce the HF content of the signal sent to the record cutting head otherwise the delicate coils could burn out Elliptical stylus marketed by several manufacturers at the end of the 1960s Cartridges that operate at lower tracking forces 2 0 grams 20 mN beginning from the mid 1960s Half speed and one third speed record cutting which extends the usable bandwidth of the record Longer lasting antistatic record compounds e g RCA Dynaflex Q 540 More advanced stylus tip shapes Shibata Van den Hul MicroLine etc Direct metal mastering Noise reduction CX encoding dbx encoding starting from 1973 In the 1970s quadraphonic sound four channel records became available in both discrete and matrix formats These did not achieve the popularity of stereo records due to the expense of consumer playback equipment competing and incompatible quad recording standards and a lack of quality in quad remix releases 39 See also edit nbsp Record production portal Album cover Conservation and restoration of vinyl discsReferences edit Origin of LP merriam webster com The history of the LP Zipkin Michele April 8 2020 Best albums from the last decade according to critics Stacker Retrieved June 3 2020 https www discogs com label 269353 Columbia Records Inc Evans Mike 2022 Vinyl The Art of Making Records p 54 ISBN 9781645178163 Vinyl fans and traders tell of love for LPs as sales soar BBC News December 28 2023 Retrieved May 5 2024 Sisario Ben October 21 2021 Vinyl Is Selling So Well That It s Getting Hard to Sell Vinyl The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved May 5 2024 Full length LP records on 150 and 180 gram vinyl Standard Vinyl Standard Vinyl Retrieved December 18 2018 Keightley Keir 2004 Long Play Adult Oriented Popular Music and the Temporal Logics of the Post War Sound Recording Industry in the USA Media Culture amp Society 26 3 379 doi 10 1177 0163443704042258 ISSN 0163 4437 The Edison Long Playing Record Regents of the University of California Discography of American Historical Recordings Retrieved 26 March 2023 Frequently Asked Questions The Vitaphone Project Retrieved August 12 2011 Rand s Esoteric OTR Types of transcriptions and radio recordings Randsesotericotr podbean com Retrieved August 12 2011 Cross Alan Strange speeds big holes and other answers to vinyl record mysteries Archived from the original on January 22 2022 Retrieved June 15 2023 Penndorf Ron Early Development of the LP Archived from the original on November 5 2005 Retrieved October 4 2006 Phonograph Disks Run for Half Hour The New York Times September 18 1931 p 48 Archived from the original on June 22 2022 Retrieved June 22 2022 a b Compton Pakenham September 20 1931 Newly Recorded Music The New York Times p X10 Archived from the original on June 22 2022 Retrieved June 22 2022 Not So New PDF The Billboard June 5 1948 p 17 Archived PDF from the original on January 27 2021 Retrieved June 22 2022 via World Radio History Goldmark Peter Maverick inventor My Turbulent Years at CBS New York Saturday Review Press 1973 Ben Sisario October 6 2012 Howard H Scott a Developer of the LP Dies at 92 The New York Times Retrieved October 8 2012 Howard H Scott who was part of the team at Columbia Records that introduced the long playing vinyl record in 1948 before going on to produce albums with the New York Philharmonic Glenn Gould Isaac Stern and many other giants of classical music died on Sept 22 in Reading Pa He was 92 a b Columbia Diskery CBS Show Microgroove Platters to Press Tell How It Began PDF Billboard June 26 1948 p 3 Archived PDF from the original on January 22 2021 Retrieved June 22 2022 The First Long Playing Disc Library of Congress Congress gov accessdate June 21 2021 Marmorstein Gary The Label The Story of Columbia Records New York Thunder s Mouth Press p 165 Columbia Record Catalog 1949 dated September 15 1948 78 Speed On Way Out LP 45 Trend Gaining The Billboard August 2 1952 p 47 Robert Shelton March 16 1958 Happy Tunes on Cash Registers The New York Times p XX14 Christgau Robert 1981 The Criteria Christgau s Record Guide Rock Albums of the Seventies Ticknor amp Fields ISBN 978 0899190259 Retrieved April 6 2019 via robertchristgau com Perry Mark September 23 2022 Animated Chart of the Day Recorded Music Sales by Format Share 1973 to 2022 American Enterprise Institute Retrieved February 7 2024 Kornelis Chris January 27 2015 Why CDs May Actually Sound Better Than Vinyl L A Weekly 1 What a record The UK album chart reaches its 1 000th No1 and counting Express Adrian Lee November 26 2013 Infographic The LP is Back Statista Infographics Retrieved July 16 2017 a b RIAA 2018 Year End Music Industry Revenue Report Vinyl records outsell CDs for first time in decades BBC News March 13 2023 Retrieved June 28 2023 Beaumont Thomas Ben September 14 2020 Vinyl records outsell CDs in US for first time since 1980s The Guardian ISSN 0261 3077 Retrieved January 25 2024 a b Statistical Overview riaa com Archived from the original on December 10 1997 Retrieved December 31 2016 McGeehan Patrick December 7 2009 Vinyl Records and Turntables Are Gaining Sales The New York Times Retrieved May 11 2010 Why Do Records Spin at 33 1 3 RPM The Sound of Vinyl Blog June 12 2017 Archived from the original on December 5 2017 10 Inch Vinyl Records Collectors Weekly November 23 2013 Archived from the original on December 25 2022 Retrieved March 30 2023 Pre echo when recording vinyl record Audacity Forum Archived from the original Forum Discussion on June 9 2009 Analog Quadraphonic Formats Retrieved April 8 2015 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to LP records Dreams of Vinyl The Story of the LP Record by Jac Holzman Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title LP record amp oldid 1222619224, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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