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1981
Volume 4, Issue 1
  • ISSN: 2052-3998
  • E-ISSN: 2052-4005

Abstract

Abstract

This article deals with vinyl records from the perspective of the cultural study of everyday life. It focuses on the author’s rituals of vinyl consumption, using as a case study Deranged’s (2016). It is shown that in an era of media convergence listening to vinyl records is an activity in which a variety of media participate in ‘doing–listening’, a process that involves the invocation of a unique secret knowledge developed over social relationships with people and things, and memories of past experiences, through which the intertextual nature of death metal texts is revealed and the doer–listener produces his or her own culture. In that sense, the value of vinyl records cannot be estimated in advance, based on ‘objective’ attributes – such as size of artwork, distinctiveness of sound, aura attribution or feelings of technostalgia – but, instead, accrues through the process of co-production through doing–listening with texts.

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/content/journals/10.1386/mms.4.1.115_1
2018-03-01
2024-10-10
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