Know those records that you insert into a vinyl record player? Basically those, but pirated since a real one costs money when you purchase them at official music retailers. It involves the process of obtaining a legal copy then using wax molds (to recreate a record) and specialized tools (prevent quality loss) duplicating the record. (Also, “Bone Music” existed in the Soviet Union by printing music by using x-ray films).
I’m old enough to remember when owning record players was the norm, but I don’t remember anyone pirating anything - they weren’t considered expensive. Cassette piracy in the 80s and early 90s - now that I do remember.
However, it certainly was a thing. In the USSR they figured out how to do it on discarded x-rays - which, I have to admit, is the most punk thing ever.
Bootleg records were a thing in Europe in the days of reel to reel tape as the only alternative. It wasn’t so much that people did it privately but people would try to make a buck through re-sale and especially on flea markets where oversight by the law was virtually nonexistent. Rare records have always been a thing. Bootleggers tried to profit off it.
I was bequeathed my parents’ record collection of about 200 LPs. One was a bootleg they kept, some rare Beatles stuff. Other ones were thrown away because the quality was bad or would have been deteriorating to a point where it became unlistenable.
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A friend in college bought a vinyl lathe. It is difficult and you will get poor results without precise instruments.
The Teenage Engineering vinyl cutter goes for something like $150 for a little portable home machine that makes 5" discs.
Glue method was a thing
Back in the day (80’s) my buddy would make a copy of his import vinyl records to high quality cassette tape for me.
This right here, back in the day you would pirate to tape, be it a cassette or a reel
If you buy bootlegs, you won’t easily be able to resell online. I got at least one bootleg, didn’t know it when I bought it, but now it’s forbidden to sell it on a well known international vinyl sales website… Record sounds great tho, so it’s fine.
It’s a copy of Marc Moulin - Sam Suffy by the way.
You can apparently 3D print a record, although it’s almost certainly not worth the effort.
others mentioning xrays to pirate vinyl reminds me of vhs.
as late as '97-98, we were still dubbing laserdisc anime to vhs with subtitles overlaid using physical genlock hardware (subs composed in the original substation alpha)
At least some of my blues collection would have been ripped from record in the late 90s and early 2000s. much of the great music of the early 20th centry never offically made it digital until very, late if ever
but I’ve never heard of wax discs being used en-mass
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