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Thursday, April 2

You can't put your arms around an mp3


When I moved to the States I stored all my records in my Dad's basement and it was 10 long years before I finally had them shipped over. When those battered cardboard boxes landed on my doorstep it was like being reunited with my lost self, as if someone had just dug up the dusty artifacts of a past life that had been fading into the distance after spending a decade in a dark room thousands of miles away. As I flipped through those old albums and singles for the first time again I was hit by a flood of memories which were just as much to do with the physical, tactile reality of the records themselves as it was the music they contained. These records had sat on the shelves in all the flats and houses I had lived in over the years, bought from record stores that don't exist anymore (by a person I wasn't anymore either), and every scuffed sleeve and worn spine, every scratch on the vinyl, was like an mark left by the past. Here was the album that got covered in beer at a party and I washed under a tap, the 12" I bought in New York the first time I went to America, the single with a message from an old girlfriend written on the sleeve. Even the faint dark stain left on a sleeve by the peeled-off price sticker was like a ghost trace of where and when it was bought. It wasn't just the soundtrack of my life, it was the actual concrete evidence of it.

What I felt even more strongly was a pang for what was missing, all the records I'd sold over the years, particularly at one point in the late-90s when I was temporarily back in London flat broke and flogged some of my most valuable ones. It was like several chapters in my life story were missing. Who, I wonder, now has the copy of "You Can't Hide Your Love Forever" that my first serious girlfriend bought me? And what had happened to Queen's "Sheer Heart Attack" album? Not the rarest record in the world by any means but it was the first album I ever bought. Surely I wouldn't have sold that too? That one really bothered me, a big milestone in my life and the evidence is gone.

Records are vulnerable, fragile things, the way they can scratch and warp gives them a human quality that cold, perfect CDs lack, you can feel the patina of age on a vinyl album just as much as you can a human face. But now with even the CD becoming obsolete it seems like music formats are shrinking out of existence, from twelve inches of vinyl to little silver discs to... well, nothing really, a sequence of digital ones and zeroes downloaded off the web with all the tangible reality of a cloud. It's like music stripped of all the lovely touchy-feely pleasures, there's no there there and how can you be that emotionally invested in something that doesn't exist? I have a whopping 45GB of mp3 files on my computer but if they all got deleted tomorrow it would be a pain in the arse but I wouldn't be all that upset about it because I could just replace them with ones that were literally exactly the same. You can't say the same about records, I've been slowly replacing some of the ones I either sold or lost over the years (the ones that aren't too expensive anyway) but the "new" copy will never be that one, the one I bought when I was 16 with the scratch on the last track I sometimes still hear in my brain even when I listen to a pristine mp3 of the same song.

So in twenty or thirty years time will someone who is a teenager now relate to their mp3 collection the way I do my records even though it just a track name on a glowing screen, still exactly the same as the day they downloaded it with no physical substance or texture they can hold, feel or smell? Will they get all sentimental about their beaten-up old iPod instead? I have no idea, I'm just one of those sad old gits with an emotional attachment to objects, particularly the circular black plastic kind.

Of course, one drawback of vinyl is that you can't download it off the internet, it's too big to fit down the tubes. So an mp3 will have to do.

Download: Some Of Them Are Old - Brian Eno (mp3)
Buy: "Here Come The Warm Jets" (album)

21 Comments:

At 11:30 AM, Blogger Mondo said...

A Perfect post, a top tune and a contender for title of the year - blogging doesn't get any better than this...

 
At 11:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I've been banging on at my kids to buy CD's. They have seen and heard much of my fave vinyl and i hope that they "collect' rather than listen and store.

As we were having that conversation my eldest daughter told me that she was also going to buy a "real " camera, because if the computer died she would not have any pictoal memories of her entire life, except the photos that my wife and I have of her up to age 15.

Brian in Canada

 
At 12:40 PM, Blogger Beth said...

Cor, that made me go a bit misty.

Lovely.

 
At 12:45 PM, Anonymous Pete said...

Well written, and my sentiments exactly!

 
At 4:33 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Music will never be as important as it was to kids growing up in the 60's, 70's 80's, because it was more valuable and more scarce and their were less distractions. Watching Top of the Pops on a Thursday, buying a single from WH Smiths on a Saturday and listening to the Top 40 on Radio 1 on a Sunday, were rituals for people all across the country - mainly because there were few other things to do with only 3 /4 TV Channels and 1 national music station. Music now, is just another background noise in the supermarket, along with ringtones and videogame sounds, reduced to becoming a freebie in the newspaper. It's a shame, but it's true.

 
At 4:59 PM, Blogger drew said...

Great post Lee, could relate to every word. The bit about selling some held particular resonance as recently I have mourning all the vinyl that i foolishly sold off over the years.

When I pick up particular singles, I swear I can smell the unique smells of the record shops I bought them in.

There is absolutely no fucking way you can get those feelings over a download.

 
At 9:18 PM, Blogger Interface said...

Well written and so true, can anyone really collect MP3s?

And I too sold off a lot of stuff when I moved in the '70s. I really wish I hadn't now.

 
At 3:39 AM, Blogger Simon said...

Yet another seller of my old vinyl. Then I remember a particular b-side and find that you cannot get it on cd. Hell, whole albums that I used to own aren't available digitally.

Unless some kind soul posts them on a blog...

It's probably just my imagination but I think a lot of blogs smell like old record shops....

 
At 4:55 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

g'day lee, i've been following your blog for many months now and have always been impressed with your beautifully written little vignettes, but i have to say, this piece is perhaps the finest distillation of what makes music so important. as you've so vividly captured, it's not just the tunes, it's the whole package. i agree, that package is diminished irreparably when there ain't no package to hold anymore.
all the best
steve, melbourne

 
At 8:43 AM, Blogger mutikonka said...

I'm surprised and full of admiration that you managed to hang on to your vinyl for so long. During my itinerant post-university phase I sold most of my 'collection' (sentimental value only) in the 1990s to a record store in New Zealand for peanuts. I was tired of hauling round the same battered boxes of Be Bop Deluxe and various once-treasured coloured vinyl Stiff Record special editions. Will today's kids look back and treasure the first time they saw Camera Obscura on Youtube?

 
At 8:56 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Bravo, Lee. I have a 12 yo son who takes the same pleasure in music as I did at his age (plus he's a pretty good saxophonist to boot). But his musical world does live on his i-pod (or classic rock stations). You can never divorce the moments from the music (because the times - dancing with DK to "Sweet Home Alabama", or CM to EWF's "Reasons", or lying in the dark with Jeff listening to "Wind and Wuthering" - are of the music and not the medium), so I expect his musical memories will be no less valid than mine or yours. But yes indeed - it seems like the delight has been taken away from discovery; from losing the tangible connection between you and the music, where you eagerly peel off the wrapping, delve into the minutiae of the liner notes, tentatively lower the needle for that first exploration. I think I'm almost as saddened by the "singles" mentality as anything; the fact that kids no longer have to explore the depths of a musician, because they've got such a smorgasbord of "hits" to choose from. Ah well. On the plus side, I'm taking my son to go see "Tower of Power" tonight ... his first real concert (excluding the Cure at age 6 mos), coincidentally enough at the venue where I saw MY first real concert. Circle of life etc. Looking forward to building a musical memory together (tho' I suspect I will ultimately cherish it more than he does). Thanks for the brilliant entry.

George.

 
At 10:56 PM, Blogger whiteray said...

My records tell similar tales. Nice post, Lee.

 
At 1:25 PM, Blogger Servalan said...

When we took my box of vinyl to the post office to have it mailed over here to the US the woman behind the counter almost had a heart attack. I don't think anybody had ever shipped that many records at once before(60 lps and some 7"s) and she had to call the manager.
I really miss that kind of thing about Britain. Over 'ere anything goes and people almost appear to go out of their way to make it work for you - still not sure if thats not some kind of a pretence..
Now I'm regretting that I off-loaded the two or three hundred albums that I did. Not because they were worth anything- some of them were- but because collecting them was so much a part of my British life. And now thats all behind me.
Great post, Lee. Made my tummy ache with homesickness.

 
At 3:55 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

Wow... that post left a mark.

Thanks!

 
At 8:14 PM, Blogger Darcy said...

Great post.

I am a hoarder and fortunately have never fallen on seriously hard times so I think I can say I have only ever offloaded a handful of records over the years.

My lust for vinyl seems to be getting even stronger lately. I now find it physically impossible to walk past a charity shop - I have to go in and scan the records and don't mind if they are just a bunch of Klaus Wunderlich and Top Of The Pops albums. I'm not buying these sort of albums - yet - but I think I'm getting closer to the day that I will - it's vinyl and I've got to have it. In fact I find it's the covers I'm increasingly drawn to, they are a document and reflection of the time they were released. An mp3 will never be able to give that, and there is something about the plastic case of a CD that is just so naff.

 
At 12:24 PM, Blogger justanartlibrarian said...

Thanks for this Lee. Wonderful post! You've helped me verbalize something I've tried to communicate to others when they ask me why I still buy CDs.

The shadow of the peeled off price sticker rang true for me - I tended to leave mine on. It always reminds me of the shop in which the purchase was made. Sadly, all of them no longer exist.

As a librarian, I have the same sentiment for books. Kindle and eBooks will never replace the dog-eared, note-written version of a favorite book.

Here's to the tactile - and sentimental.

 
At 3:52 PM, Blogger ally. said...

oooh i've gone all a bit teary and trembley. lovely piece guv. i'm off to give some 45s a hug
x

 
At 10:43 PM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

I just discovered your blog and loved it.

I'm a 24 year old girl that, for some strange reason, has a passion for records since I was a child.

I remember being fascinated with my father's collection as a young kid, starting my own cd collection at 12 and, finally, getting to start my own vinyl collection at 16.

Not that long ago I talked about my passion with some friends and their reactions were...well, you can imagine.

You just told about all the reasons why I love collecting records.
Cause the ones I bought new are part of my story, and I'm a part of the story of the used ones I bought, as well.

Thank you for the beautiful post.

 
At 6:30 AM, Anonymous Anonymous said...

If its any consolation, Lee, I left about 500 records in America that included You can't hide your love forever, Queen is dead, Durutti Column, animal logic, bauhaus and the only fun in town.
Morrissey was quite right when he said you can't ever go home again...


Juls in PJ

 
At 9:40 AM, Blogger Steve Rogers said...

I sold all my records last month and good riddence to them - most of them bore me now. Some might interest me but they are scratched and. lets face it, Vinly sucks as a medium.

Guys Loosen up and move on - its the music that is importent not the mouldy old containers!

 
At 6:20 PM, Blogger londonlee said...

Actually, vinyl very much doesn't suck as a medium.

 

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