In our increasingly digital world, audiophiles know that the real recording is on vinyl. That’s why sales of vinyl continue to soar. Mike Evans offers a sumptuous visual celebration of this medium’s fascinating history and triumphant rebirth. From weighty 78s to feisty 45s, from eccentric EPs to legendary LPs, he brings vinyl recordings off the shelves and out of the crates,
· The development of discs from shellac to vinyl · Run-out groove messages, picture discs, limited editions, colored vinyl, and deluxe 180g reissues that make fans and collectors rejoice · The records’ iconic packaging and art, including the work of Reid Miles, Roger Dean, Peter Saville, and Hipgnosis · The history and development of various leading labels, such as Atlantic, Audio Fidelity, Casablanca, Decca, Def Jam, Motown, Verve, and more · Groundbreaking artists and their game-changing releases, from the first 45, Eddy Arnold’s “Texarkana Baby,” to the vinyl revival as led by Jack White’s Lazaretto
As is this case with these catch-all books of art, quotable history, and sleeves, what begins as a promising tome of audiophile history somehow ends up at the doorstep of Jack White when talking about modern day vinyl output. It's a pretty book that is a bit more immersive than a coffee table book but considering the amount of typos, poor editing, and the fall off the cliff in quality that happens when the book tries to lightly touch on vinyl's evolution from the 60s to present day, it'd be better as a condensed, pretty-to-look-at coffee table book.
Interesting book; not quite an in-depth study of records and record-making but there are plenty of tidbits that not everyone would've known prior to reading. The progression of vinyl records is nicely documented until the chapters on the 80's-90's-2000's. Vinyl records were obviously in decline but there could've been a little more on some of the independent and enthusiast labels that kept that form alive. Using this book as a sole resource, you'd think that the 2000's was all about Jack White and not much more. While he's an important figure in vinyl's slight resurgence, there's more to the story than that. The 'Record Store Day' movement is touched on only in a photo caption, for example. I would've rated the book four stars if these recent years were handled with a bit more depth.
Excellent book with a number of great pictures and facts. For example, did you know that Blonde on Blonde was the first pop/rock double album? No, me neither. A lovely book for vinyl lovers like me, and great to see my local fave store The Music Exchange getting a listing at the back.
Trazido pro Brasil pela Folha de São Paulo, o livro é um insight da industria da música, desde os discos de acetato até os últimos anos de primor dos discos de vinil e sua reascenção como objeto de memorabilia e decoração. O livro também pontua gravadoras e álbuns que marcaram época, indo de Elvis Presley até o underground com a música eletrônica, com nomes como o do dj e produtor Aphex Twin e sua gravadora Warp. Livro pesado e de capa dura, objeto de decoração pra amantes de vinil e da música analógica.