Last month Cisco in Japan closed their doors and this week Creative Vibes in Australia and Neuton in Germany are shutting down their operations and Pinnacle in the UK has gone under administration (insolvency, which is similar to bankruptcy/liquidation)
Last year we had the closings of Amato in the UK, Unique in NY, Watts in NY, Syntax in NY and many more.
This economy sucks !!!
In November, Cisco Music (the audiophile label in California) and their parent company, Cisco International, filed for bankruptcy and shut down their business completely. This included all their retail stores throughout Japan, which they shuttered last year, their online store and their vinyl distribution division. Cisco was one of the leading vinyl sources in Japan with many retail stores throughout Tokyo. Their online store was the busiest for vinyl.
Neuton, one of the biggest (vinyl) music distributors, is about to announce its insolvency today. After the collapse of the UK distributor Amato and the Japanese distributor Cisco, the whole vinyl label scene and the distributors put Neuton under extreme pressure. Neuton worked with many top electronic labels, distributing music for diverse labels including Four Twenty, Tresor, Vakant, or Perlon and has worked in the past with labels like Bpitch control, Playhouse, Klang or M_nus.
Australian label and distributor Creative Vibes is calling it a day after nearly 15 years in the business. In a statement, the founders blamed in part competition from vertically-integrated multinationals and the recent massive fall in the Australian dollar for their decision to wind-up.
Pinnacle Entertainment who have been around since 1992 as a leading software, games and music distributor in the UK has gone under administration today.
URP Music Distributors, based in Nashville Tennessee, is still selling loads of vinyl.
Wednesday, December 3, 2008
Music Company closings ... (sad times)
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Labels: Cisco Music, Creative Vibes, distributors, Neuton, R.I.P., vinyl
Fo'Shizzle ... Martha Stewart & Snoop Dogg make Mashed Potatoes
This is great!! Two convicted felons making mash potatoes. Snoop Dogg makes a guest appearance on Martha Stewart's show and show us how to make grannie's mashed potato recipe.
Dig the groovy invisible Cognac. It's bottle is shaped as a female body with a dress on it ... and Martha undresses it.
Oh ... you want me to take the skizzin' awf of it..
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Labels: cooking, Martha Stewart, Snoop Dogg
Tuesday, December 2, 2008
Madonna - "Miles Away" Double 12" and Picture Disc 12"
MADONNA
"Miles Away"
Double 12” vinyl
Warner Brothers
MS-517549
093624979944
27-Jan-2009
8.99
A1.) Miles Away (Thin White Duke Remix) (6:09)
A2.) Miles Away (Radio Edit) (3:43)
B1.) Miles Away (Johnny Vicious Club Remix) (7:26)
B2.) Miles Away (Morgan Page Dub) (7:08)
C1.) Miles Away (Johnny Vicious Warehouse Mix) (8:20)
C2.) Miles Away (Aaron LaCrate & Samir B-more Gutter Mix) (5:00)
D1.) Miles Away (Morgan Page Remix) (7:07)
D2.) Miles Away (Rebirth Remix) (7:30)
MADONNA
"Miles Away"
Picture Disc
12" Vinyl Single
Warner Brothers
MS-517550
093624979937
27-Jan-2009
13.98
A1.) Miles Away (Radio Edit) (3:43)
A2.) Miles Away (Thin White Duke Edit) (4:34)
B1.) Miles Away (Morgan Page Edit) (3:50)
B2.) Miles Away (Johnny Vicious Club Edit) (4:37)
UPDATE (12/12/08): The Picture Disc has been CANCELLED by Warner Brothers
Available at: http://www.vinyluniverse.com/
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Labels: Madonna, picture discs, vinyl
Recreating Album Covers
The same forum that gave us the highly popular Extending Album Art have now come up with Recreating Album Art. Now that Sleevefacing is a household name, album-art-mania is taking the world by storm... and you know I AM LOVING IT !!
The main rule to this ... NO PHOTOSHOPPING
Here are some of my current faves ....



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Labels: Album Cover Art, Album Cover Design, LP covers, record jackets, sleeveface
SAD NEWS: Retailers: Black Friday Music Sales Down
blame this recesssion we are in for this ...
While mainstream media is touting that the Black Friday weekend started the holiday selling season with a bang, music merchandisers certainly didn't have that experience. Music sales were down anywhere from 10% to 30% and hit albums released for Black Friday didn't perform up to expectations, according to merchants contacted by Billboard.
According to sources, Kanye West's "808's & Heartbreak" will sell in the range of 425,000-450,000 units, significantly down from 700,000-975,000 units previously projected.
Guns N' Roses "Chinese Democracy" is expected to clock in at 250,000-260,000, which is also down from expectations that it would sell anywhere from 300,000-784,000 units.
While some press reports show across-the-board retail weekend sales up 7%, music merchandisers point out that in order to accurately measure the holiday, it should be measured the week containing Black Friday this year - which was the last week in November - versus last year, when the day fell in the third week of November. Consequently, some merchants say they doubt the validity of the 7% increase reported by the mainstream media.
At music specialty stores Newbury Comics sales were down 21% on a comparable store basis for the last two weeks of November, while music sales were down 28%, reports the Brighton, Mass.-based chain's CEO Mike Dreese.
In Marietta, Ga., comparable-store sales were down 5%, according to Value Music president Rob Perkins. But the chain had yet to breakdown music sales and other categories at deadline.
At big box retailers like Wal-Mart and Barnes & Noble, label executives report that hit sales were off significantly for the Black Friday weekend, anywhere from 30% to 40%.
On the other hand, as expected, online shopping was stronger than last year, says an executive with a wholesaler that does CD and DVD fulfillment for online stores. But he declined to provide details, other than to say that Friday was better than Thursday, for the first time.
"I hear traffic was high, but overall purchasing wasn't because shoppers were cherry picking the deals," says one senior distribution executive.
[Billboard]
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Labels: Black Friday, music industry, retail store
You Say You Want a Revolution (at 33 1/3)
WHEN Melissa Walker, 31, was growing up, vinyl records were nostalgic artifacts. But when three crates of LPs were left in an apartment she had rented, a $10 thrift store record player turned those records into a kitschy novelty. And when her boyfriend bought her a Rega P1 turntable and a Bill Evans jazz album for her 30th birthday, playing the records became a daily ritual.
“Dave brought it home, and we dimmed the lights and sat on the couch with a glass of wine, and I felt like we were in a jazz club,” Ms. Walker said. “I could hear the musicians breathing. It felt like I could hear them smoking.”
Now she holds listening parties in her Brooklyn apartment, introducing friends to the rich sound of vinyl. “There is something I like about the process of listening that way,” she said. “Having to listen to it in the order the musicians intended, and turning it over. There is something social about it.”
Sales of new LPs show that Ms. Walker isn’t the only one rediscovering vinyl. While CD sales dropped last year, sales of records were up 36 percent, although they are still a minuscule part of the music market.
All those records have to be played on something. And when it comes to turntables — no one would dare call them record players these days — there are many options, from bare-bones $99 models to ultra-high-end audiophile equipment with price tags of $100,000 or more.
There are so many choices, in fact, that it can be tough for a shopper to know where to begin. “You can buy too much turntable or too little turntable for the rest of your equipment,” said John-Paul Lizars, marketing director at Sumiko, which imports and distributes turntables. He recommends investing about a third of your equipment budget in a turntable. “I urge people to get the best turntable, cartridge and phono preamp as they can,” Mr. Lizars said, “because if you don’t capture the content at the source, no other component can enhance it.”
A turntable is a basic piece of equipment — a motor turns a platter on which the record sits, and a tone arm holds a needle and a cartridge. The needle wiggles as it rides the record’s groove, and the cartridge converts those vibrations to electrical signals that go to an amplifier.
But in those few parts lies a world of variation.
Modern turntables are usually either direct drive or belt drive. Direct drive has been popular with radio and club D.J.’s because the record gets up to speed very quickly. The downside is that motor rumbles can be audible on lesser models.
Belt drive is more common, with a rubber belt insulating motor noise from the platter. Belt drive turntables can require maintenance (belts occasionally wear out), and they can be less precise, causing speed variations heard as wow and flutter. But that is not a problem in audiophile-quality equipment, said Ed Dorsey of Soundscape, an audio boutique in Baltimore. “The wow and flutter is so small, the average person isn’t going to hear it, only the musician with perfect pitch.”
Less expensive turntables, like the Denon DP-29F, which lists for $150, and the Pioneer PL-990
, which lists for $130, generally come with permanently installed cartridges. That means no souping-up the turntable with aftermarket parts.
But adding a new cartridge is the most common way to improve a stock turntable. “Most of the time turntables come with an entry-level cartridge,” said Ken Bowers, manager of Needle Doctor, near Minneapolis. A better cartridge will get more information from the record groove for more detailed sound, he said.
As prices go up, the quality of the parts improves. The turntable bases, instead of hollow plastic, are made of metal or dense wood, which dampen vibrations. “You’ll get tighter bass, better imaging, more detail,” Mr. Bowers said.
On high-end equipment, motors tend to be heavier and more precise, the bearings in the tone arms present less friction, and the level of craftsmanship is higher. “You are buying build quality, you are buying precision,” Mr. Lizars said.
Once again, more precision means more detailed sound. The price of turntables with solid bases and replaceable cartridges generally begins around $300. Ms. Walker’s Rega P-1 and the Pro-Ject Debut III, which is imported by Sumiko, both list for $350 to $400.
To those audiophiles returning to vinyl, that may seem like a small price for high-fidelity quality, but like all things technological, turntables have become cheaper and better. “The $300 turntable of today is vastly superior to the $300 of 20 years ago,” Mr. Lizars said.
Those who want to spend more can do so easily. “Our turntable lists at $46,000, but we are far from being the most expensive,” said Lloyd Walker of Walker Audio in Audubon, Pa., who handcrafts the company’s Proscenium Black Diamond turntable. “They go up to a quarter of a million.”
For $46,000, Mr. Walker said, you get 250 pounds of turntable with a platter and tone arm that float on a nearly frictionless cushion of air. And Mr. Walker comes to your listening room to tweak every setting for optimum performance. “Setup is extremely important,” he said.
That is also true of less expensive turntables. The cartridge must be correctly aligned and the tone arm weighted properly. Some cartridges or tone arms come with an alignment tool, but they can be bought separately for $5 to $275. Likewise, a stylus force gauge, which measures the pressure of the needle on a record, can cost $25 for a weighted balance or $450 for a precision digital model.
To check your work, there are test LPs that play a series of signals that let you hear, for instance, whether both channels are equally loud. Such recordings can cost from $30 to $100.
Of course, for a fee you can usually get the shop that sold you the turntable to set it up.
Among the pleasures of turntables are the tasks and rituals that surround preparing to play a record. That means cleaning off dirt and dust and removing static. Mr. Walker said that nothing less than a machine that vacuums a cleaning fluid from the record would remove the manufacturer’s release agent — a lubricant that makes a record come out of a mold. “It will sound 30 to 50 percent better,” he said. “It’s a big difference.” Such devices can cost hundreds to thousands of dollars.
Others may be satisfied with an inexpensive carbon fiber brush or the classic Discwasher cleaning fluid and pile brush for $20.
But Mr. Bowers warns against fixating on minute technical details. Better to spend your time at thrift stores finding music that will never appear on a CD. “Playing records,” he said, “should be fun.”
[NY Times]
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Labels: cartridge, records, turntables, vinyl
Monday, December 1, 2008
Notorious - Original Motion Picture
Over a year ago we were already talking about the forthcoming biopic on the late, great rapper, Notorious B.I.G. and now the movie and soundtrack are about to hit HARD !!
BAD BOY ENTERTAINMENT PRESENTS
THE FIRST SINGLE FROM THE “NOTORIOUS” SOUND TRACK IN STORES 1/13/09
JAY-Z
“BROOKLYN GO HARD”
FEAT. SANTOGOLD
PRODUCED BY: KANYE WEST
Notorious Soundtrack In-Stores: Jan. 13, 2008 (there WILL be a vinyl release but the release date has not been set at this time)
Notorious Movie In Theaters: Jan. 16, 2008
BAD BOY BABY!!!
“Notorious” soundtrack tracklist
1. “Notorious Thugs” (featuring Bone Thugs-N-Harmony)
2. “Hypnotize”
3. “Notorious”
4. “Juicy”
5. “Party & Bullsh—”
6. “Warning”
7. “One More Chance” remix (featuring Faith Evans)
8. “Brooklyn Go Hard” (Jay-Z featuring Santogold)
9. “Letter to B.I.G.” (Jadakiss featuring Faith Evans)
10. “Kick in the Door”
11. “What’s Beef”
12. “World Is Filled”
13. “One More Chance” (featuring CJ Wallace - Biggie's son)
14. “The Notorious Theme” (composed by Danny Elfman)
15. “Microphone Murderer” (previously unreleased demo)
16. “Guaranteed Raw” (previously unreleased demo)
17. “Love No Ho” (previously unreleased demo)
www.foxsearchlight.com/notorious
Main Cast
Jamal Woolard (Notorious B.I.G.)
Angela Bassett (Voletta Wallace)
Derek Luke (Sean Combs).
Antonique Smith (Faith Evans)
Naturi Naughton (Lil' Kim)
Dennis White (Damion 'D-Roc' Butler)
Julia Pace Mitchell (Jan)
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Labels: Angela Bassett, Bad Boy Records, hip hop, Jamal Woolard, Jay-Z, Notorious (movie), Notorious BIG, Santogold
Salem record store goes back to its roots
Since opening Ranch Records in 1982, Kit Close has been providing the kind of rare, offbeat music and collectibles that you won’t see in the Wal-Mart music section. A self-described “record nerd," who has always had a huge record collection, Close has followed his dreams to a profitable business, opening two other Ranch Records stores in McMinnville and Bend. Close’s wife Lori runs the McMinnville store and his partner John co-owns the Bend store. Even though this might seem like a modest chain, Close says, “Surprisingly, we find ourselves as the largest independent chain of music stores in Oregon. Who saw that coming?”
Ranch Records recently opened in its new Salem location on High Street, the sixth space it’s inhabited, from its most recent spot on Liberty Street. Close says he moved because the old space was larger than he needed and the heating bills were enormous.
“[The] place was a little run-down," Close said. "There was an oil burner in the basement from the '50s. Heating oil got so expensive last year it was costing me $1500 a month to heat it.”
Kit estimates that about 90 percent of his stock is rock and roll, with a little bit of jazz, blues and hip-hop making up the other ten percent.
Music released on vinyl records has had a recent resurgence, Close says. With the move, Ranch Records has cut back on CDs to focus more on records.
"It’s what all music stores are doing these days. If you want digital music, you just download it off the Internet really cheap. We still sell a lot of used CDs, but new CDs are almost going away. I don’t want to pay $16 for a CD. We’re bringing in a lot more records than we used to. Plus, I’ve been stockpiling records for the past 20 years and we’re starting to break into those.”
The appeal of vinyl records, Close thinks, is that it’s like a piece of art.
"It’s like books or anything else. It’s something you can hold. When you play records you’re more connected to the music because you have to get up every 20 minutes and turn the record over! You put CDs on, sometimes they just become background. I have a six-changer CD player and I won’t change the CDs for a week.”
According to Close, records aren’t cheap, and even more expensive than CDs. But he doesn’t think people mind paying the extra money because of the artwork that you get to see on a record.
Some records are being released on extra-thick, 180 gram vinyl that can run from $30-$40, but Close is convinced that the sound quality is “absolutely” better than a standard vinyl record. In the '90s, vinyl was dying out. CDs were hyped as what would make vinyl obsolete. New records were still being made, but the punk and underground music scenes were what kept the medium of vinyl records, especially singles, alive. One of the claims about CDs (espoused by the makers of CDs) was that they were a lot more durable than records. Close agrees.
“When they came out, they said that CDs were indestructible. But that’s absolutely not true.”
Ranch Records doesn’t try and compete with mainstream music stores.
On the future of recorded music, Close says, “the days of selling 20 million records are over. Bands are going to have to rely on touring, T-shirts, and merchandise and stuff to make a living. There’s a lot of other ways for bands to make money these days. Commercials have become huge. Bands come out and do commercials before they’re even known. People come here all the time, ‘what’s that song on that so-and-so commercial?’ There was a day when we looked down on bands for doing that though. We were idealistic; it was the '60s.”
[Willamette Live]
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Labels: Oregon, Ranch Records, record stores, records, retail store, Salem, vinyl
Ace Hotel is for Vinyl Lovers

When the original Ace Hotel opened in Seattle, Time described it as “a superaesthetic barrack, with an in-the-know economy of style.” The new Ace Hotel in New York, located in the former Hotel Breslin and set to open in February, fits the same description: turntables in every room, vintage furniture, retro plumbing fixtures. Roman & Williams, the team behind the revamped Royalton Hotel, was in charge of the overhaul. The ambience promises to be achingly hip, with a curated music selection from Other Music at the front desk (guests can purchase CDs and vinyl). Product collaborations include custom Pendleton blankets and a boxing-robe-meets-hooded-sweatshirt by Wings and Horns. The team behind the Spotted Pig is in charge of the restaurant, and Portland-based Stumptown Coffee Roasters is providing the caffeine. On the corner of Broadway and 29th Street; go to Ace Hotel for reservation information.

[Remodelista]
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Labels: Ace Hotel, hotel, New York, Portland, Seattle, turntables, vinyl
Old Rare New: The Independent Record Shop
There is nothing quite like the feeling of thumbing through LP after LP in a dusty old record shop, only to stumble upon some hidden treasure, new obsession or forgotten love. Old Rare New: The Independent Record Shop is a homage to the holy places of music collecting, complete with their particular anecdotes, peculiar characters, and unique environments.
Emma Pettit, formerly of the Institute of Contemporary Arts, has travelled across the UK and America into these eclectic spaces of musical exchange, interviewing record shop owners, collectors and musicians to provide a rich account of the increasingly rare independent record shop. Featured shops include Other Music (New York), Aquarius Records (San Francisco), Amoeba Records (California) and Jazz Record Mart (Chicago). The first comprehensive look at these important institutions, Old Rare New: The Independent Record Shop is an essential read for the musically inclined.
Featuring contributions by Byron Coley (Ecstatic Yod), James Dean Bradfield (Manic Street Preachers), Simon Reynolds, Devendra Banhart, Billy Childish, Bob Stanley (Saint Etienne), Sean Bidder (Vinyl Factory), Rob Da Bank (Bestival) and Bonnie 'Prince' Billy.
From the Back Cover
'There is nothing quite like walking into a strange little record store in a town far from home and finding a record you've been after for so long, you didnt even remember you wanted it until you flipped through the bin and saw it. There is no similar charge available online, and it can't be gotten from a CD. It is something unique to vinyl and little stores and the people who live to breathe their air.' - Byron Coley from Ecstatic Yod
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Labels: books, Old Rare New: The Independent Record Shop, record stores, retail store















