Music goes mini: Tiny Vinyl turns records into a pocketable format

Shawn Knight

Posts: 15,825   +202
Staff member
Why it matters: When was the last time you bought a single song on a physical medium? For most people, the answer is probably decades ago – or maybe never. A new startup, however, is hoping to change that. They've got a lot going them, and one giant hurdle that could wreck everything.

Tiny Vinyl specializes in creating miniature versions of traditionally-pressed music records. Each single measures four inches – enough for one song (four minutes) per side. The company said the format is perfect for singles or special releases.

Records can be played on most manual turntables at 33 RPM, so long as the tonearm can reach the center of the platter. The company said both the packaging and the vinyl color is customizable, and that they are better for the environment than a standard LP due to the amount of material used (15g per Tiny Vinyl versus 140g for a standard record).

Tiny Vinyl leverages several selling points including consumers' ongoing love for music, nostalgia tied to vinyl records, and the growing trend of miniature products. Being smaller means they will also consume less space on store shelves – an added bonus considering how costly retail space can be.

About the only thing Tiny Vinyl has going against it right now is pricing. A quick check of Target's website revealed a variety of records available to pre-order spanning virtually every genre – all priced at $14.99 each. That is a lot to pay for two songs (it wasn't long ago that an entire album used to sell for around $15), and could very well limit Tiny Vinyl to the niche / collectibles category for most. I might consider picking up a couple but it would only be those with artwork I absolutely adore and would want to display on a shelf.

According to Tiny Vinyl's website, the pint-sized records will be a Target exclusive although the company does mention the possibility of using them as concert merch or for special promotions.

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.....Because they enjoy vinyl records?
Exactly. And this is coming from someone who already owns a turntable. (Technics Quartz SL-1401 (Circa 1980)). At present I'm using it as a stand for` my Lava Lamps.

As for vinyl records, startups, and merch, they should all have poison warnings attached.

"Warning, these products may be hazardous to your bank account"
 
The last time I saw a "mini-CD" with magazine shareware software on it was thousands of years ago. Man, I feel old now....
I know the feeling. I'm about to hit "lucky 77" in a couple of months.

This should cheer you up, Cher in a thong, with an entire battleship chocked full of "big guns" **.


** I'm not entirely certain, but these may in fact, be phallic symbols.
 
Soon to appear tiny turn tables. I thought we had that before called 45s and EP 45s? Marketing point, better for the environment and making it look like CDs. Will be interesting to see how it turns out.
 
Soon to appear tiny turn tables. I thought we had that before called 45s and EP 45s? Marketing point, better for the environment and making it look like CDs. Will be interesting to see how it turns out.

Considering that the closer the tonearm gets to the spindle, the worse side tracking error becomes, you may need "tiny turntables", to mitigate that error.

That said, I still remember "the good old days", when you needed a 45 RPM spindle adapter to play singles on a standard, (33 1/3, 45, & 78 RPM) turntable. The upside to this was that you could stack maybe ten 45's at a time on it. This enabled you to ruin as many of them as you could stack on the first play, given the absolute sh!t ceramic cartridge which lay in wait to devour them.

However, given the fact that we have a former skag addict, delusional anti vaxer, "brain worm addled" psychopath, without medical training running our HHS, anything, or everything could possibly happen Given the abundant stupidity and herding instinct of the American public, this could take off like a, "Bat out of Hell". (With apologies to the late, "Meatloaf".)

If measles can make a comeback, why not 45's?
 
Anything to make you keep rebuying the same crap a few dozen times in your life time. Next some new fancy cds will make a come back so you can once again buy the same album you have purchased 500 times in your life.
 
Exactly. And this is coming from someone who already owns a turntable. (Technics Quartz SL-1401 (Circa 1980)). At present I'm using it as a stand for` my Lava Lamps.

As for vinyl records, startups, and merch, they should all have poison warnings attached.

"Warning, these products may be hazardous to your bank account"

Nice deck! I have the SL-1301. I found a NOS unit and I could not believe my eyes. People think that pealing a screen protector is a nice feeling.. try opening a brand player from 1978 - if you are into vintage audio that is. I almost couldn't do it. Replaced the headshell with a At-Hs1 and NAG MP-110 and put the original parts away for safe keeping. Running it though a Marantz PM550dc and Celestion UL8s. I don't have any lava lamps but I am thinking about an old CRT TV to have next to my stack

I will be buying some of these.
 
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