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Memphis Record Pressing Becomes Largest Vinyl Record ManufacturerLast month Memphis Record Pressing, already one of the biggest players in the fast-growing vinyl record pressing industry, held a pair of ribbon cuttings to commemorate the completion of a $30 million expansion that positions the eight-year-old company as the largest vinyl record manufacturer by volume in North America.
On April 13, the mayor of Bartlett, Tennessee, the Memphis suburb that Memphis Record Pressing has called home since its 2014 founding, joined company co-founders, CEO Brandon Seavers and COO Mark Yoshida, and other dignitaries to cut the ribbon on MRP’s $21.3 million expansion of its pressing plant. A week later on April 20th, Bar-Kays bassist James Alexander and Moneybagg Yo producer Ari Morris were among the guests who helped christen MRP’s new $7.5 million packaging and shipping hub at 7625 Appling Center Dr.
The ribbon cuttings cap a dramatic growth phase that saw MRP triple its physical footprint and staff. MRP is actively recruiting workers to staff all levels of its expanded operation, with an additional 100 workers needed by June. Current open positions can be found on the company’s website at memphisvinyl.com/careers/.
Speaking at the April 20th event, CEO and co-founder Seavers announced that MRP, which presses records from most of the major labels as well as indie labels and artists, had set a new company record, making 1.3 million records already that month. The company is on track to produce 20-25 million records this year. When running at full capacity, MRP can press as many as 125,000 records a day or more than 45 million a year, making it the largest vinyl record manufacturer by volume in North America.
Once thought to be an all-but-dead format, vinyl records have been mounting a steady comeback for more than a decade, with record sales steadily increasing for 17 years and surging during the pandemic. Last year, vinyl album sales overtook CD sales for the first time since 1987 with 43.46 million copies sold.
About Memphis Record Pressing
Founded in 2014, Memphis Record Pressing (MRP) has quickly grown to become a global leader in LP vinyl production and one of North America's largest vinyl pressing plants, with vinyl output increasing from less than 1 million LPs in 2015 to over 8.5 million in 2022. Fueled by increased global attention on the vinyl resurgence, an insatiable appetite by vinyl consumers, and a strategic partnership with GZ Media (the world's largest vinyl manufacturer), there’s no end in sight. MRP's goal is to make the highest quality record, with the fastest turnarounds in the industry, backed by the best customer service around. MRP is proud of its Memphis Music heritage and dedicated to keeping all things vinyl alive and spinning for many years.
Memphis Record Pressing Becomes Largest Vinyl Record Manufacturer
www.musicconnection.comLast month Memphis Record Pressing, already one of the biggest players in the fast-growing vinyl record pressing industry, held a pair of ribbon cuttings to commemorate the completion of a $30 mill…
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Debunking your music production misconceptions (2023)
Veteran producer iBEENART goes undercover on Instagram, Reddit, Twitter, and YouTube to answer popular questions and debunk common misconceptions.Debunking your music production misconceptions (2023)
splice.comVeteran producer iBEENART goes undercover on Instagram, Reddit, Twitter, and YouTube to answer popular questions and debunk common misconceptions.
- in the community space Education
Yaoan, Jeia, and Rita Kim celebrate their roots through music
To commemorate AAPI Month, we asked Asian, Asian-American, and Pacific Islander creators to craft a track that exudes the spirit of "celebration."Yaoan, Jeia, and Rita Kim celebrate their roots through music
splice.comTo commemorate AAPI Month, we asked Asian, Asian-American, and Pacific Islander creators to craft a track that exudes the spirit of "celebration."
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ByteDance expands responsibility of TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew to include its Instagram rival Lemon8 (report)ByteDance is putting another of its apps, Lemon8, 'under Chew’s supervision', according to a report from The Information
SourceByteDance expands responsibility of TikTok CEO Shou Zi Chew to include its Instagram rival Lemon8 (report)
www.musicbusinessworldwide.comTikTok’s CEO briefly became a celebrity this spring, when he faced an aggressive grilling from US congressional lawmakers.
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100+ CEOs and scientists, including ChatGPT boss Sam Altman, warn of ‘risk of extinction’ from future AI systemsAI experts issue statement warning about the potential dangers of advanced artificial intelligence
Source100+ CEOs and scientists, including ChatGPT boss Sam Altman, warn of ‘risk of extinction’ from future AI systems
www.musicbusinessworldwide.comAI experts issue statement warning about the potential dangers of advanced artificial intelligence…
- in the community space Tools and Plugins
SSL launch UF1 DAW Control Centre SSL's new single-fader controller can be used on its own, or paired with the UC1 and up to four UF8s to form a larger control surface.
SSL launch UF1 DAW Control Centre
www.soundonsound.comSSL's new single-fader controller can be used on its own, or paired with the UC1 and up to four UF8s to form a larger control surface.
- in the community space Tools and Plugins
ModeAudio Metalwork: Found Percussion Samples Metalwork - Found Percussion Samples from ModeAudio whirs and grinds its way into your DAW, melting the shimmering clamour and intense heat of the factory down into hammering sonic shards... Read More
https://www.kvraudio.com/product/metalwork-found-percussion-samples-by-modeaudio?utm_source=kvrnewindbfeed&utm_medium=rssfeed&utm_campaign=rss&utm_content=26271 - in the community space Music from Within
YouTube kills Stories as Google emphasizes Shorts for fan engagementYouTube is discontinuing its Stories feature as of June 26th in a move designed to emphasize its TikTok-like YouTube Shorts feature. Much like Instagram Stories, YouTube Stories were considered an. Continue reading
The post YouTube kills Stories as Google emphasizes Shorts for fan engagement appeared first on Hypebot.YouTube kills Stories as Google emphasizes Shorts for fan engagement - Hypebot
www.hypebot.comYouTube is discontinuing its Stories feature as of June 26th in a move designed to emphasize its TikTok-like YouTube Shorts feature. Much like Instagram Stories, YouTube Stories were considered an. Continue reading
- in the community space Music from Within
Fix The Tix coalition voices strong opposition to BOSS ticketing billThe Fix Tix has come out in strong opposition to the BOSS Act introduced in the U.S. Congress last week. The Fix The Tix coalition includes NIVA, NITO, UMG, See. Continue reading
The post Fix The Tix coalition voices strong opposition to BOSS ticketing bill appeared first on Hypebot.Fix The Tix coalition voices strong opposition to BOSS ticketing bill - Hypebot
www.hypebot.comThe Fix Tix has come out in strong opposition to the BOSS Act introduced in the U.S. Congress last week. The Fix The Tix coalition includes NIVA, NITO, UMG, See. Continue reading
- in the community space Tools and Plugins
AIR Music Technology unveil Jura softsynth Jura offers a faithful emulation of a Roland Juno-60 as well as featuring an extended interface option that unlocks a range of modern capabilities.
AIR Music Technology unveil Jura softsynth
www.soundonsound.comJura offers a faithful emulation of a Roland Juno-60 as well as featuring an extended interface option that unlocks a range of modern capabilities.
- in the community space Music from Within
How remixes can revive old tracksSome songs just need a few tweaks and a new beat to top the charts again. Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0 looks at the phenomenon and how to take advantage. Continue reading
The post How remixes can revive old tracks appeared first on Hypebot.How remixes can revive old tracks - Hypebot
www.hypebot.comSome songs just need a few tweaks and a new beat to top the charts again. Bobby Owsinski of Music 3.0 looks at the phenomenon and how to take advantage. Continue reading
- in the community space Tools and Plugins
We Asked 1,500 Music Producers How They Use AI in Music Production
Is AI music a threat to creativity or an asset? And how do music producers feel about it? You can hardly go anywhere these days without being bombarded by the effect of AI, especially in creative industries. Whether it’s Chat GPT, Midjourney, or otherwise, the advent of AI is here. But what about music production? [...]
View post: We Asked 1,500 Music Producers How They Use AI in Music ProductionWe Asked 1,500 Music Producers How They Use AI in Music Production
bedroomproducersblog.comIs AI music a threat to creativity or an asset? And how do music producers feel about it? You can hardly go anywhere these days without being bombarded by the effect of AI, especially in creative industries. Whether it’s Chat GPT, Midjourney, or otherwise, the advent of AI is here. But what about music production?Read More
- in the community space Tools and Plugins
M-Clarity plug-in from Techivation Described as a dynamic resonance suppressor, Techivation's latest plug-in aims to enhance the overall clarity and tonal balance of individual sources or entire mixes using spectral shaping technology.
M-Clarity plug-in from Techivation
www.soundonsound.comDescribed as a dynamic resonance suppressor, Techivation's latest plug-in aims to enhance the overall clarity and tonal balance of individual sources or entire mixes using spectral shaping technology.
- in the community space Education
Pamela Z: Singing the body electricIn the mid-1980s, artist Pamela Z was working at Tower Records on Columbus Street in San Francisco, where one of her jobs was replacing pages in the store’s Phonolog, an enormous alphabetized directory of all the music available at the time, which formed a kind of bible of pop. When she ripped one loose-leafed sheet from the book, she noticed that all the titles on that sheet began with “you.” You stayed on my mind. You stole my heart. You stepped out of a dream. When spoken, the repetition of the words had an undulating, musical quality. It soon found its way into one of her electronic compositions, the found poetry processed with four-track cassette recorder, the simple list of phrases made incantatory through the looped rhythms of the human voice.
Pamela Z, the recipient of this year’s Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts at MIT, has become renowned for her pioneering work in live digital looping and interactive audio/video performance. Her voice is the centerpiece of these performances, manipulating and layering recordings in real time to produce complex sonic textures. Through the use of experimental extended vocal techniques, operatic bel canto, multimedia and sampled sounds, digital processing, and wireless MIDI controllers that use physical gestures to manipulate sound, Z creates immersive and magical aural collages.
While her first tool was a hollow-body guitar, which Z would use to accompany herself in clubs at night as she sang opera arias by day, her art changed once she discovered a digital delay in the '80s. “I came home from the music store, hooked everything up and started singing through it,” she remembers. “I never went to sleep that night because I was just looping my voice over and over again, and discovering beautiful properties of repetition, of layering, of being able to harmonize with myself, of being able to make complicated things by feeding back into the delay as I added more and more layers. I really think that I was never the same after that.” Having new technological tools, she said, allowed her to listen in new ways, discovering all the polyphonic dimensions within a single sound.
In the decades since, Z has sought possibility in the objects of everyday life — Slinkies, plastic water jugs, hair clippers, and power tools — working these found materials into densely layered compositions, woven through with her classically trained soprano. The sound of the freight elevator in her loft, a glass falling on the floor, or a fragment of conversation can all become defamiliarized and creatively repurposed in the work. What begins as a simple act of noticing, then, in the process of composition, evolves into much larger meditations on the human condition.
In the 2010 work “Baggage Allowance,” for example, the experience of hauling suitcases through airport security expanded into a philosophical investigation of memory, belonging, and what it means to carry things with you. “Her process is ‘Let's explore a subject area, or take these objects and put them together. Let's take this language and cut it up, letting its meaning evolve through examining it in what seems to be an objective way,'” says Evan Ziporyn, Kenan Sahin Distinguished Professor of Music and faculty director of the Center for Art, Science and Technology, “and then ending up with something very subjective, personal, and moving.”
At MIT, Z worked with students on their own compositions incorporating found sounds. The students, says Ziporyn, submitted their sounds two hours before the start of class. By the time the group met with Z, she had not only listened to each one but found in each something unique. What she modeled for the students, says Ziporyn, was a form of deep attention to a world swelling with sonic potential. “It was a good lesson in the idea of recontextualizing a sound that you find out in the world somewhere,” says Z, “And just by the act of recording it and listening to it on its own, you've already begun making a piece.” By the last session, she says, each student “had made really beautifully sculpted sound pieces.”Z often performs her compositions with sensor-based, gesture-controlled MIDI instruments, wearing pieces of hardware as jewelry. Her gloved hands, like a conductor’s, summon sound from empty air. As part of her residency, Z performed a suite of her compositions for solo voice and electronics, ranging from early groundbreaking works to recently premiered ensemble pieces. Joining her, among musicians from the Boston area, were pianist Sarah Cahill, violinist Kate Stenberg, and flutist and MIT student Sara Simpson. Ziporyn conducted one of the pieces. For Z, the creation of the performance — its movements, feeling, and visuals — is deeply integrated into the process of composing itself. “It seems like magic — one voice becoming many, bird calls emerging and dispersing with the wave of a palm — but it’s really a multilayered virtuosity,” writes Ziporyn, “imbuing every aspect of Pamela’s work, smoothly masked by her grace as a performer. Pamela works with interactive music systems designer Donald Swearingen to develop the instruments and designs her own hardware, then learns how to use both as second nature.”
If some artworks fetishize the novelty of new technology, while others might dismiss it as somehow removed from what we perceive as human, Z has found a way to seamlessly combine digital tools with the ancient arts of performance, the manipulated sounds of the machine coalescing with the music of her own body.
Z’s expressive form of electronic music, Ziporyn says, reflects how we live today. It reflects the condition of living in a world mediated by technology, a world of bits and atoms, where the digital and analog are continually overlapping zones of experience. Her work, he says, defies any artificial separation between the so-called natural and the synthetic. And, as Z reminds us, we ourselves are electric: Everything we do, think, and feel is powered by the electrical currents coursing throughout the body. Her performances, says Ziporyn, are arguments for accepting that both the material and digital are part of what it means to think, feel, sense, and express — part of what it means to be human.
Presented by the Council for the Arts at MIT, the Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts at MIT was first established by Margaret McDermott in honor of her husband, a legacy that is now carried on by their daughter Mary McDermott Cook. The Eugene McDermott Award plays a unique role at the Institute by bringing the MIT community together to support MIT’s principal arts organizations: the Department of Architecture; the Art, Culture and Technology program; the Center for Art, Science and Technology; the List Visual Arts Center; the MIT Museum; and the Music and Theater Arts Section.
Pamela Z: Singing the body electric
news.mit.eduCombining digital technology with the human voice, Eugene McDermott Award in the Arts at MIT winner Pamela Z creates layered music from everyday life. She had a residency at MIT in spring 2023 where she gave lectures, demonstrations, had class visits. and performed a concert.
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Tommy Stinson Talks Cowboys in the Campfire, the Replacements, Guns N' RosesTommy Stinson spoke to AllMusic shortly before the release of his new album and chatted about his latest project, if a reunion with Paul Westerberg is a possibility, and his thoughts on Chinese Democracy.
Tommy Stinson Talks Cowboys in the Campfire, the Replacements, Guns N' Roses
www.allmusic.comPhoto Credit: Vivian Wang Tommy Stinson has played with some of the biggest (Guns N' Roses) and most respected (the Replacements) bands throughout his long-and-winding career.…