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Largest Vinyl Record Collection in the World

Paul Mawhinney of Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania has built what is considered the largest vinyl record collection in the world. In this video you can see footage of the sound archive, which is housed in a large storage warehouse. According to Mawhinney, the collection contains about 1 million albums and 1.5 million 45s. On top of all that, Mawhinney has cataloged the entire collection and maintains his collection in a searchable database. Good for you, Mawhinney!

As of 2009, Mawhinney has decided to retire and is looking for someone to purchase and preseve the collection, en masse. I would love to see that collection on Record Revolution. Maybe my collection will get there one day.

The Archive from Sean Dunne on Vimeo.

Website: Collecting Record Covers

IB Image I just found an interesting website called Collecting Record Covers. The site highlights cover art from rare vinyl records and celebrates the vinyl record as object.

The Vinyl Record Industry in 1979

Check out this video of a 1979 news broadcast from Los Angeles about about the state and future of the vinyl record industry. It contains some great footage of vintage Los Angeles including the old Tower Records on the Sunset Strip, footage from outside the Whisky a Go Go (showing MIchael Nesmith on the marquee), a short clip of The Dickies in the recording studio, and footage of a band called 707 playing the Troubadour. Also look for the short interview with Doug Weston who founded the Troubadour in 1957.

Making the Beastie Boys Vinyl Record

Video from the Beastie Boys's YouTube channel showing the making of the vinyl version of their newest album, Hot Sauce Committee Part Two:

Improving Record Revolution’s Taxonomy and Cataloging System

New Genre Terms

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Members, RecordRev is getting organized! To improve the site’s taxonomy structure and its overall organization we have added a new Genre classification system to our cataloging form (if you’re a member, see the “Add New Album” tab). The terms in our new drop-down menu include common top-level musical styles such as Jazz, Hip Hop & Rap, and Classical. The addition of these new genre terms will ensure that our site maintains at least a basic taxonomy structure in place for all cataloged vinyl records. Our cataloging form will continue to feature the same free tagging system and you can utilize these two systems together to provide a highly structured yet flexible classification system for your digital record bins.

Tips for taking care of your vinyl records

IB ImageMembers, check out this article from Goldmine Magazine, "How to get better sound from from vinyl records." The article lists some important tips for what you can do to get better sound from your vinyl records.

One of the more interesting suggestions is...a lint roller?! Well, it's a special lint roller designed specifically for being used on vinyl records. According to Goldmine Magazine, it's a quick and easy way to clean records and it "resembles and works just like a household lint roller, employing a roll of sticky tape that picks up dust and debris from offending surfaces — in this case, the surface of records."

New location for your Record Bins

Members! In efforts to continue improving the layout and workflow of Record Rev, links to your personal Digital Record Bins are now accessible through your own profile pages. We've removed the "My Record Bin" menu tab and have added the "Go To My Record Bin" link at the bottom of your profile's thumbnail album gallery (see the big red arrow below!). To browse other members' record bins, simply navigate to their profile page and click on the "Go To My Record Bin" link. Bladow! More improvements to come.

File 983

Alex Steinweiss, creator of album artwork

IB ImageAlex Steinweiss, who passed away on July 18, 2011, was a trained graphic designer and helped reshape how vinyl records were designed and marketed in the 1940s and 1950s. Prior to this period, the majority of albums were released with a simple, plain paper packaging with the title stamped on the front. Steinweiss, who joined Columbia Records as its Art Director in 1939 (http://www.aiga.org/medalist-alexsteinweiss/), came up with simple idea to include a unique image on an album cover to help market and boost sales of new albums.

The first album cover he designed (below) was for a 1939 collection of songs by Rodgers & Hart. The album design shows the artists' names on a theater marquee with the album title in lights. According to AIGA, this album cover was inspired by French and German poster styles that Steinweiss had learned about in a high school arts class. Steinweiss "developed a unique signature style that used geometric patterns, folk art symbolism, and a curly hand-drawn lettering (that became copyrighted as Steinweiss Scrawl)." All in all, Steinweiss designed more than 850 album covers during his career at Columbia Records (http://www.aiga.org/medalist-alexsteinweiss/).

IB ImageAlbum artwork was a simple yet profound innovation for vinyl records. Even in the digital age, artwork is such an integral part of a musical release (whether released on iTunes or as a new vinyl record) that it's hard to imagine an album not being adorned with a unique or provocative photograph or piece of artwork. Album artwork is one of my favorite aspects of vinyl records and it's one of the reasons I built this website--so that people can highlight, describe, and share the unique and interesting aspects of their vinyl record collection, such as the story behind an album's artwork. 

Top photo from the New York Times; bottom photo from Flickr.

New features on RecordRev

We've now got some new Google News and blog feeds on RecordRev to bring you the latest news about vinyl records, record stores, and news from some of the prominent record labels out there that are producing and releasing new vinyl records.

The feeds can be found under the recordrevolution.com/feed/... root. UPDATE: All current feeds can be located at http://www.recordrevolution.com/aggregator/sources Some of the new news feeds as of today are from:

Amoeba Record's Amoebloghttp://www.recordrevolution.com/feed/amoeblog

Jack White's Third Man Records feedhttp://www.recordrevolution.com/feed/third-man-records-news

San Francisco's Aquarius Record's blog feedhttp://www.recordrevolution.com/feed/aquarius-records-blog

Los Angeles's Origami Vinyl Record Shop's blog feedhttp://www.recordrevolution.com/feed/origami-vinyl-blog

Henry Rollins' KCRW broadcastshttp://www.recordrevolution.com/feed/henry-rollins-kcrw-broadcasts

There are some others and we will be adding more in the near future. In addition, we'll aggregate all these feeds on the RecordRev Social page so  you can easily find all the links and feeds in one place.

RecordRev blog coming soon...

Hey RecordRev members! We're going to be starting up a site-wide blog in the near future so we can share news and updates about RecordRev with our members. This will also be a place where we can get comments/feedback from you all about the site and where we'll create discussion forums on any topic related to the site, music, the vinyl record revolution, etc. It's under construction for right now, so please stay tuned!

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