Collectors and music fans wearing the T-shirts of obscure rock bands brave the tropical heat outside a record store near Malaysia’s capital, waiting to get their hands on new cassette tapes.
No, this is not a flashback to the 1980s, but an event marking recent International Cassette Store Day, an annual celebration of a music format once thought headed for extinction, but now enjoying a rebirth.
Vinyl’s renaissance is well-known and now it seems cassettes are rising from the grave, with artists such as Kanye West and Justin Bieber releasing songs on tape.
In Southeast Asia, low production costs and a retro-cool image have made cassettes an underground music fixture, especially for struggling bands getting their name out.
“Cassettes are our best sellers,” said Mohammad Radzi Jasni, owner of the store Teenage Head Records, after shoving one by Singaporean surf-punk band Force Vomit into a bulky tape player.
“They are still the best way to discover new bands here. It is very affordable for the guys releasing it and the fans buying them,” he added.
Manufacturing costs can be as low as 4 ringgit (US$0.95) per tape in Malaysia, compared with 60 ringgit to 80 ringgit for a vinyl record.
Vinyl’s cost is a hurdle for young bands and DIY labels in Malaysia, Indonesia, Thailand and the Philippines.
There are no vinyl-pressing plants in Southeast Asia, cassette lovers say, while cassette plants still dot the region.
To mark International Cassette Store Day, Teenage Head Records released 200 cassettes featuring Malaysian rock band Bittersweet. Almost all were sold out by the day’s end.
Bittersweet has released three CD albums, but keyboardist Fadhilul Iqmal said pressing a few more songs on cassette helps pump up the band’s discography at low cost, while the format’s compact size makes it more mobile than vinyl.
Such thinking has helped fuel a burgeoning DIY cassette label industry in the region. In Indonesia, they have a newfound novelty appeal among younger people who grew up with digital music.
As with vinyl, fans also appreciate the tangible nature of tapes and the artwork that comes with the inlays.
“It is trendy right now with a generation of 20-somethings not used to buying physical music,” said Marcel Thee, vocalist of Indonesian band Sajama Cut, which recently issued a two-song cassette.
“Tapes provide a platform for releasing singles. If it was not on tape, it would have garnered less attention,” Thee said.
Notorious for getting jammed, unspooled, and for their hiss-heavy sound — cassettes were eclipsed worldwide by CDs in the early 1990s, though they held their ground in Southeast Asia until the early 2000s.
For older music fans, the cassettes bring back fond memories of homemade mixtapes.
Sound is another issue — the vinyl and cassette cognoscenti dismiss digital music as too compressed and lacking the warmth of analog sound.
“Vinyl has a warmer sound, but it is more expensive. If you have money you can buy vinyl, if you do not have money, you can buy cassette,” said Mohamad Nor Yaacob, cofounder of Malaysia’s Basement Records, which focuses on hardcore punk and metal.
For struggling young bands, cassettes are a potential entry ticket into the industry.
“First you release on cassette, like 100 pieces. When people know your band, you can make vinyl if you have money,” Nor said.
Later, exports of cheaply made cassettes can help labels and bands reach a larger fan base overseas, opening up touring possibilities.
“The underground scene here has actually been pressing cassettes long before it got hip again so I do not see why it cannot stay,” Radzi said.
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