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What I want to find out, expanded into where I would find the information …
What I want to find out, expanded into where I would find the information
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Do people prefer hunting for vinyl in-person, or ordering vinyl online?
Asking people inside record stores, like HMV. I could expand into asking a employee there about it.
Look through online sites such as Reddit, someone has probably created a thread before, already asking the same question.
During an interview I could ask a specific person this as well, maybe I could get perspectives from polar opposite people, opinion-wise.
Will vinyl collecting, truly remain timeless?
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There could be a different outlet for answers online, look at professionals talking about this previously, (if they had discussed this before).
Ask a variety of people who collect vinyl about this, seeing where they stand on it.
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Explanation of the music vinyl beginnings, eventually being replaced etc.
Watch a video on the history of music vinyl and turntables, easier way to process the information as well as being unique.
Look online, see the history of music vinyl, the timeline and how it all changes.
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People reselling vinyl online, for profit.
Look at real examples like Discogs. This is a reseller site, look at prime examples that are overpriced like Tyler, The Creator's - Chromakopia vinyl. There is one hundred thousand on them and people are still reselling for an awful amount.
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Look online on previous discussions on sites like Reddit, here you can see people talking about how it is 'ruining vinyl collecting', especially for new collectors etc. - You could further link this to bootlegs as well, people feeding money to these bootleg companies to obtain rare 'copies' of these projects. It allows consumers to not spend an insanely high priced vinyl, instead getting a copy from a different manufacturer.
Young, small artists pressing their own music on physical.
Look at Instagram pages like ElijahCore who has put his own music on CDs and shared them with his fan-base.
We also have a slightly bigger artist like Millkzy, who is right underneath one million monthly listeners on Spotify. He still is yet to get a hardcore or big fan-base however. On Instagram he has said inside of his fan group chat. He plans on releasing his new album on vinyl and keeping it very low in numbers so they sell. This is a smart approach because it means that people would be more eager to buy it, if they know that it is going to be limited. Another way to look at it is they can show off and showboat later into his career if he does become big, as they were there since the beginning and have proof of that.
I could also look at other online sites to see if there are more examples of other artists doing their own custom physicals as well.
What young people think about record store day, how prominent it is still in today's society.
Ask people about the limited vinyl, and get their opinions and thoughts on it. Via online and in-person interviews etc.
Look at online discussions before, talking about how worth it, it is to wait for those big events etc.
Unique vinyl variants.
Examples include...
Water filled vinyl, I believe that multiple artists have done this.
Powder filled vinyl, like CharliXCX's variant of 'brat'.
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