![]() ![]() If you REALLY want to see their music on wax, why don't you offer to put up the money and have a small run of records pressed. Maybe you should think about why you actually want their album on vinyl because obviously you can already listen to the music. If it was cheap and easy for somebody to have a vinyl record made from a CD of FLAC file, everybody here would own their "grails".Įven if you had a lathe cut made, they usually sound like garbage and are more of a novelty than anything.Įven if you had permission from the artist AND put up the money to have a proper pressing done you would still just be listening to a digital FLAC file or CD ripped onto vinyl so you wouldn't really be gaining anything in terms of listening experience other than the novelty of owning a record. You could have a one off lathe cut done BUT you would need permission from the artist or a shitty company that is willing to skirt copyright laws. As the lacquer is a soft material acetate. The music is cut into the lacquer on a lathe using a sapphire cutting head. Although called acetate, an acetate dubplate is in fact a metal disc covered in a nitrocellulose lacquer. That's why you usually see runs of at LEAST 100 when a band has an album pressed. The difference between acetate dubplates (also known as lacquers) and vinyl dubplates is the material they are made of. ![]() Free Your Mind As we welcome Leo Cap to the Artikal family with his EP I Feel Good. Having one record pressed will cost you a lot of money (mastering, having a stamper made, printing packaging, etc.). I Feel Good by Black Barrel Leo Cap, releases 03 March 2023 1. Most reputable companies would require you to have permission from the artist to reproduce their material. There is so much wrong with this I can't even formulate my thoughts into a paragraph. ![]()
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