During the making of last year's tongue-twisting, ear-blistering album by the Rank Strangers, "Tucke des Objekts, Die," frontman Mike Wisti was haunted by the thought that the music he labored over would wind up micro-compressed onto iPods and laptops instead of cranking out of home stereos in its full ragged glory.
"The whole time we were working on the record I was thinking -- and this is depressing -- what's the point of CDs anymore?" recalled Wisti. "It's as if digital technology has led us to a place where music is no longer about how it sounds, but about how convenient it is to store it."
Wisti came to a conclusion that many other local bands are making: Vinyl is the way to go. Or at least it's one way to go in this transformational era of musicmaking.
The only physical pressing of the Strangers' album was on vinyl. Two other bands, Chooglin' and First Communion Afterparty, recently issued live albums on vinyl. (Chooglin's comes with a CD copy inserted inside.) Many others have doubled up and sold their latest albums in both vinyl and CD, including Tapes 'N Tapes, Haley Bonar, Vampire Hands and most of Rhymesayers.
In case you haven't heard, vinyl is enjoying a resurgence worldwide. Sales were up a whopping 89 percent in 2009. Many indie record stores in town have expanded their vinyl offerings, including the Electric Fetus, Treehouse, Eclipse and Cheapo. Treehouse alone has sold 125 copies of Skoal Kodiak's vinyl LP, said owner Mark Trehus, who also issues vinyl on his label Nero's Neptune (coming up: a Spider John Koerner set from 1963).
In the case of FCAP -- whose members are mostly younger than the CD format (26 years old) -- going vinyl was a way to attract hardcore music lovers.
"Vinyl is something the true music freak will want," said singer (Mama) Carin Burno, who believes "everything sounds authentic" in that format.
Christian Fritz, who puts out FCAP's records on his label Mpls. Ltd., has been dealing in vinyl since the early '90s. He watched the cost of manufacturing vinyl go from half of what CDs cost to more than three times as much (about $1,800 for 500 vinyl LPs, compared with $500 for the same number of CDs). Still, he understands why bands want to do it.