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Technics direct drive turntables
"MiNe 109" wrote
*People* abandoned the medium because they couldn't find them in stores. This happened quickly in the US. Sorry, I don't buy that. Whilst record company policies might have slightly hastened the decline of the LP, it can hardly have been the principal reason for the decline of LP sales. There have been many examples of large companies losing a lot of money trying to force the public into buying something they don't want or having the public banging on the doors demanding a product that a company is reluctant to sell. Had the public wanted to buy LPs rather than CDs that exactly what they would have done. David. |
Technics direct drive turntables
In article ,
"David Looser" wrote: "MiNe 109" wrote *People* abandoned the medium because they couldn't find them in stores. This happened quickly in the US. Sorry, I don't buy that. Whilst record company policies might have slightly hastened the decline of the LP, it can hardly have been the principal reason for the decline of LP sales. There have been many examples of large companies losing a lot of money trying to force the public into buying something they don't want or having the public banging on the doors demanding a product that a company is reluctant to sell. Had the public wanted to buy LPs rather than CDs that exactly what they would have done. I'm glad you accept record company policies may have hastened the decline. I'm also willing to entertain the possibility that lps had already lost the battle to the cassette well before cd. A while back I looked at media sales numbers up to the early nineties and found lp hung on longer in the UK than the US, which could explain our different views. Here it was practically overnight that lps disappeared. I had given up on classical lps about when cd came along because of pressing quality problems, so I was excited about the new product. Stephen |
Technics direct drive turntables
"MiNe 109" wrote in message
I'm glad you accept record company policies may have hastened the decline. That's pretty strange all by itself, especially given the big qualifier "may" I'm equally glad that you admit that the decline was only hastened, and not actually caused by any such policies. ;-) It is all meaningless, now. I'm also willing to entertain the possibility that lps had already lost the battle to the cassette well before cd. Cassette was the convenience at a cost in sound quality play that vinyl bigots falsely accuse the CD of being. A while back I looked at media sales numbers up to the early nineties and found lp hung on longer in the UK than the US, which could explain our different views. Here it was practically overnight that lps disappeared. If you haven't already figured it out, new tech costs signficiantly more in the UK (and EU) than in the US. I had given up on classical lps about when cd came along because of pressing quality problems, so I was excited about the new product. I'm glad to see you finally admit that improved sound quality was a strong factor in the rapid distruction of the LP market by the CD. ;-) |
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