Friday, December 19, 2025
ADVT 
Tech

Sony To Go Retro With Vinyl Comeback

IANS, 30 Jun, 2017 09:50 PM
     
    Sony, one of the world's largest record labels, is going back to its vinyl days.
     
     
    According to CNN, Sony Music Entertainment said this week it will begin pressing vinyl records again, ending an almost three-decade hiatus.
     
     
    A spokesperson from the label said that this move is taken to cater the "dramatic increase" in demand for vinyl music in recent years, adding, interest is coming from younger customers, who have never used records before as well as older fans.
     
     
    Sony ended production of vinyl in 1989 after CDs cornered the market.
     
     
    Consulting firm Deloitte forecasts the vinyl music industry will post double-digit growth in 2017 for the seventh year in a row, selling 40 million new discs and generating as much as 900 million dollars in revenue.
     
     
    Vinyl could account for up to 18 percent of all physical music revenue this year, which is likely to top five billion dollars, Deloitte said in a recent report. Turntables and other vinyl-related accessories are also benefiting as a result.
     
     
    Sony said it will resume vinyl production by March next year in a factory southwest of Tokyo that's run by one of its subsidiaries. It still hasn't yet decided which genres of music it will produce, according to the spokesperson.
     
     

    MORE Tech ARTICLES

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro
    Aiming to make deeper inroads into the emerging markets like India and China, tech giant Apple on Monday stunned its rivals by launching a cheaper, smaller yet powerful iPhone SE and a game changer 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Apple Launches Cheaper 4-Inch iPhone SE, 9.7-inch iPad Pro

    Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

    If that sounds familiar, it's because that's how Facebook decides what to show users of its online social network. 

    Instagram Says It Will Show Posts In Order Of 'Relevance'

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment
    Self-driving cars are "absolutely not" ready for widespread deployment despite a rush to put them to put them on the road, a robotics expert warned Tuesday.

    Robotics Expert: Self-driving Cars Not Ready For Deployment

    Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

    Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted
    Encryption shields 77 per cent of the requests sent from around the world to Google's data centres, up from 52 per cent at the end of 2013, according to company statistics released Tuesday.

    Google Reveals 77 Per Cent Of Its Online Traffic Is Encrypted

    Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

    Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook
    Results showed that participants who share more about themselves on Facebook had greater connectivity of both the medial prefrontal cortex and precuneus. 

    Decoded: What Brain Does When You Reveal More On Facebook

    Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like

    Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like
    It doesn't take a high-tech headset to see that virtual reality is the rage. It's being touted as the future for all things sensory, from games to film and television, from storytelling to visual art

    Never Tried Virtual Reality? Here's What It's Like