Austrian company Rebeat is looking to fundamentally change the way vinyl records are mastered, promising to bring what it calls "HD vinyl" to stores sometime in 2019. With the triumphant resurgence of ...
The money is starting to be deployed, and Rebeat Innovation intends to get HD vinyl into stores next year. When you purchase through links on our site, we may earn an affiliate commission. Here’s how ...
“High Definition Vinyl” has moved closer to a turntable near you. In 2016, a European patent filing described a way of manufacturing records that the inventors claimed would have higher audio fidelity ...
Last week a nerdier segment of the music world was abuzz with the news that an Austrian company Rebeat had taken a $4.8 million dollar investment to help bring its “HD vinyl” records to market by mid ...
Though its market share of music sales is still relatively small, the resurgence of the vinyl record is very much a recognizable music retail trend that doesn't seem to be slowing. Now, an Austrian ...
Vinyl records are in the midst of a surprising renaissance, fueled not only by millennial nostalgia but by high-tech turntables. As CD and digital music sales continue to decline due to online ...
Last week Billboard Magazine reported that U.S. album sales grew by 15% in 2018. That was actually the 13th consecutive year that album sales rose over the prior year as the format continues its ...
The next step in the vinyl revival is on horizon as the first ever 'High Definition' vinyl is expected to be released next year. Austrian-based startup Rebeat Innovation has received $4.8 million ...
Even amidst a sonic landscape in which any song you’ve ever imagined is available at the call of an Alexa, folks still love vinyl. It’s warm. It’s nostalgic. It looks super romantic alongside the ...
A Perfect Circle’s Mer de Noms debuts in 2xLP 180g high-definition vinyl via Interscope & Capitol’s Definitive Sound Series, limited edition 3,000 copies. A Perfect Circle’s Mer de Noms—in case anyone ...
An analog audio recording pressed in vinyl. The 45 RPM record holds one song per side, while 33 1/3 RPM "Long Play" records hold an entire album (see LP). With the sound literally "carved" in a spiral ...