[78-L] Youth collectors

neechevoneeznayou at gmail.com neechevoneeznayou at gmail.com
Mon May 3 10:40:04 PDT 2010


I think the only youth collectors on this list are the old coots who 
wish they could collect some of their lost youth.

For the majority of the population, there just isn't enough exposure to 
78s for the average young listener to even become interested in the 
music, let alone the artifacts. To them the Beetles is old music, it's 
what their parents listened to, just as many of our parents listened to 
big bands and such.

joe salerno


Gene Baron wrote:
> There are several threads on this interesting topic so I wasn't sure which
> one to reply to but I chose this one.  I think we need also to distinguish
> between colelcting the discs and interest in the music itself.  My son is 22
> years old and is about to graduate from Earlham College in Richmond
> Indiana.  Not too many people know much about Richmond IN other than us old
> music enthusiasts (for Gennett, or course) and Quakers (for the college and
> related Quaker organizations located in the same town).  Falling into both
> of these groups, I am no stranger to the area.  But I digress -- my son has
> a strong interest in music going way back, and has even featured English
> Music Hall and old Hillbilly music on a radio show has has hosted from the
> college for a year or so.  He enjoys seeing the oddities I pull out from the
> basement, and I am sure he'd be pleased to get my 78rpm records at some
> point, but I doubt he'd listen to them much.  He is very much of this era in
> that even the oldest of the music he plays is from CD reissues or gotten on
> line.  So in his case anyway I think the interest in the musical content
> outweighs the interest in the physical record itself.  Thanks.
> 
> Gene
> gene.baron at gmail.com
> 
> On Mon, May 3, 2010 at 12:15 PM, David Lennick <dlennick at sympatico.ca>wrote:
> 
>> Vinyl seems to be "hip", but Barnes & NoBull tried it for about five
>> minutes. Possibly the fact that they were carrying stuff like "Sweet Baby
>> James" for $18 when you can find an original copy in any Goodwill for a buck
>> didn't help.
>>
>> dl
>>
>>> Date: Mon, 3 May 2010 16:09:47 +0000
>>> From: fnarf at comcast.net
>>> To: 78-l at klickitat.78online.com
>>> Subject: Re: [78-L] Youth collectors
>>  >
>>>> So everybody on the list is right - the young people of today
>>>> don't know what a 78 is and they are also very interested when
>>>> they hear one.
>>> I don't think 78s will be coming back anytime soon, but vinyl LPs sure
>> are. Sales have been increasing by 30% a year for a couple of years now,
>> with the biggest interest among young people, even teens. At some hipster
>> stores, records sell as much as, or more than, CDs, and most new releases
>> today are available on LP, with a coupon for a free MP3 download. It's CDs
>> that are in most danger of dying out; the only reason anyone wants them is
>> to rip to MP3 as quickly as possible and get rid of (records are a pain to
>> rip).
>>> In addition to new releases, companies like Sundazed are reissuing
>> thousands of classic country, rock, funk, and jazz LPs. It's a little
>> startling to walk into a shop and see pristine new copies of the first
>> Flying Burrito Brothers or Pretty Things record sitting in the bin for the
>> first time in forty years!
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