They say that everything sounds better on vinyl, and while playing your favorite double-sided LP over and over again may be great for your ears, it's terrible for your wallet. Some well-preserved ...
Unsurprisingly, several of The Beatles' most significant records dominate the list.
Crosley already had an ongoing relationship with the Beatles, offering a wide selection of popular Beatles-branded accessories. The company has now renewed that license, which means all-new, ...
As more listeners embrace the modern vinyl renaissance, fans around the world are increasingly on the hunt for the coolest wax to spin. We’d all love to find that hidden first pressing of Sgt.
For members of the Official Beatles Fan Club in the 1960s, Christmas was a very special time of year. That’s because season’s greetings from the seminal band arrived in the mail, in the form of a ...
It was 1948 when the first vinyl record with a speed of 33 ⅓ rpm was made. Since then, countless vinyl have been recorded, and here are the most valuable.
Most vinyl fiends hunt that perfect, elusive gem. Los Angeles-based collector and musician Greg Wooten digs for distinctly imperfect records. Wooten’s new art book, Marred for Life!, is a curated ...
Check your cartridge and sharpen your stylus: Beatlemania is coming full circle. The remastered Beatles albums that dropped on 9-9-09 will be released as LPs on Nov. 13, Apple Corps and EMI said ...
Vinyl records are making a comeback among the youngest generation of music listeners, and the hobby of collecting classic records isn’t as cheap as it may seem. Listeners may still be able to find ...
During the six decades since United Record Pressing stamped out the Beatles’ first U.S. single, the country’s oldest vinyl record maker has survived 8-tracks, cassettes, CDs, Napster, iPods and ...
Forbes contributors publish independent expert analyses and insights. Hugh McIntyre covers music, with a focus on the global charts. The Beatles’ “Now and Then” is the U.K.’s bestselling vinyl single ...
“If absence makes the heart grow fonder, it is certainly the case for vinyl records,” says David Baker, operations manager and program director at St. Ambrose University's KALA-FM. Baker has been a ...