Cassette Store Day: More Than Just Nostalgia!

Bittles’s Magazine

Ah, cassettes! I remember them well! My first forays into the wonderful world of music listening was through tapes with the very first albums I bought being Whitney by Whitney Houston and Licensed to Ill by The Beastie Boys. Yes, even back then I was an eclectic adventurer and overly pretentious to boot! By JOHN BITTLES

tumblr_static_cassette_store_day_2013_light_bg
I remember getting mix tapes back when acid house was first making its way over to Belfast and hearing DJs that I had only previously heard about and coveted from afar. Sets by luminaries such as Sven Väth, DJ Dag, Carl Cox and Sasha became my staple listening pleasure. Of course in a troubles-ravaged Northern Ireland the chance of seeing any of these guys live was slim so tapes were a way of attempting to bridge that important cultural gap.

But more vital to myself and many other malnourished Belfast urchins were the mix tapes created by our own favourite local DJs that let us hear all the tracks we loved. They also gave us people we could be proud of that weren’t alcoholics or wore balaclavas and carried guns. These were guys who took up the mantle to fill the void in our lives and bring acid house to an appreciative audience that loved every single tune. Robbie Nelson, Iain McCready, Glen Molloy, and, of course David Holmes became our heroes by playing the tunes that spoke so profoundly to my friends and I back in the day.

And that’s the thing with tapes you see! In the late eighties, early nineties times were pretty fucking tough. Belfast had been thoroughly neglected by the Conservative government, and if you didn’t work on the docks then you didn’t work at all. Most people that were into acid house were 14 to 18 years old. We didn’t have enough money to buy the records we adored, or to go out clubbing each and every week, (although we did try). And in the pre-internet days even trying to track down these tracks in a small city like Belfast would have proved impossible for all but the most clued-up of souls. This is why the humble cassette, or mix tape was a life-line! It opened up the music that we loved and made it accessible to all.

Now, on Saturday 7th September 2013 we will see the very first international Cassette Store Day. This is marketed as a celebration of the world of the humble tape and will see artists such as Haim, Deerhunter, The Flaming Lips, The Pastels and many others release special or exclusive tapes. There will be screaming hardcore, pastoral indie, experimental electronics and maybe even some chugging house. With almost 100 releases to choose from it’s fair to say that there should be something for more or less everyone.

Ok, so it may be a complete rip-off of Record Store Day which has now gotten so big that someone really needs to beat it down, and it seems that most people don’t even own a cassette deck anymore. Yet, anything that stands proud and says ‘we are here to celebrate independent music’ should, in my opinion at least, be wholeheartedly applauded and receive a good, manly pat on the back.

But with the cassette apparently making a bit of a comeback into the world’s consciousness and special events planned all around the globe there are signs that Cassette Store Day may yet prove to be a success. For instance, in Rough Trade East here in lovable London there will be a full day event with DJ sets and bands such as Bright Lights Bright Lights and The Proper Ornaments playing live.

One thing that I have wondered though is what do cassettes mean to people today? And is there still a place for them in the current world of Spotify, Amazon and Soundcloud? As I had always dreamt of one day becoming an investigative journalist I decided to set out (send e-mails, and Facebook messages) to discover what the word is on the street!

The first thing you notice when you nervously bring up the subject of music tapes is that people will instantly fall into a faraway look of nostalgia. They will smile and immediately tell you about their childhood memories and exactly what it was that cassettes meant to them.

For instance, Milly reminisces about the clunky feel of a cassette and how you could spool it using your fingers to try to cue it up to exactly the right place, which is something she still enjoys to this day! Similarly Pauline remembers having to spend what seemed like hours winding the tape back with a pencil after it had inevitably gotten stuck and ‘eaten’ by the cassette player. A truly horrible fate!

Najet’s memories involve listening to her tape of Aha every night while fantasising about Morten Harket. So much that by the time she got to school all she would be good for would be falling asleep. She also brings up the fragile beauty of the humble cassette by relaying how her beloved Violator by Depeche Mode tape was horribly destroyed by an evil little sister even though Najet had played said cassette every single day for over a month. Maybe the sister had simple had enough of Dave Gahan’s gravely tones and decided to silence him the only way she knew how.

Tony’s strongest memory involves customising his tapes by painstakingly creating his own covers which as he says is ‘A great little way of putting your own stamp on favourites’. He also remembers making compilation tapes for all his friends and how he would be introduced to lots of great music when they made tapes for him. This can have unfortunate side effects though as I can remember when I was a precocious teen dumping a girl after she made me a ‘tape’ as the music on there was so sad and lame.

Lucy remembers the introduction of ‘reverse play’ with tapes which will go down as one of the most hideous and annoying inventions of all time. Chris meanwhile casts his mind back to his Americana tape by The Offspring and the many hours of unbridled joy it brought into his life. Margaret also remembers her favourite David Bowie tapes ‘I didn’t buy many tapes I don’t think. They never had the romance of records. Except maybe when I briefly had a crap knock-off Walkman type device? Mostly David Bowie in that case, whose albums I was happy to have in any number of different formats.’

Jens, is like me and has rather fond memories of his old mix tapes with one in particular holding a very special place in his heart. To be specific it was a recording of ‘the 1live party service from the Turbinenhalle’. Having recently found it while preparing to move house he couldn’t bring himself to throw it away even though he no longer owns a tape deck to play it on.

The thing about all these and the hundreds of other replies that I got is how all of them saw cassettes as something of the past. Personally I think this is a shame! Tapes rattle and they hiss, sometimes they even clunk. And in horrible situations they even make a terrible noise that lets you know that your very favourite album is no more. But that brings a rare physicality to the music that has all but been forgotten in the perfect sound waves of the digital age. Amanda Brown, head of 100% Silk, still releases cassettes regularly today that contain some of the most sublime and forward-thinking house today. When asked her views on tapes she replied ’I love cassettes because they’re so tactile, they appear like a present, like a lasting object that feels just perfectly weighted and right in your hands. Also they give music a bit of cosy grime, and I like that.’ Perfectly said!

I still have many of my favourite tapes even though I admit that I haven’t listened to any of them in a while. Blissed Out by Beloved will always stay close to my heart. As will my Omen mix tape by DJ Dag and Vengeance II by Dr Oz and Cliff McKay. I first heard Aphex Twin on cassette, Silver Bullet, Jane’s Addiction, Orbital and many more. I remember getting my friend to buy Lovesexy by Prince for me in Woolworths as it had a naked man on the cover and I was worried that the sales assistant might assume I was gay.

And I miss those days when you could walk around town with a ghetto-blaster on your shoulder letting everyone around know what impeccable taste you had (it’s a bit like iPod headphones today, only a little bit quieter). But who knows, maybe for one day this year we can bring those glorious times back. So, on this 7th of September please join me in dusting off those forgotten tapes in the attic and giving them another little play. Sure some will get eaten and others will have completely given up the ghost, but those that survive will bring back memories and leave a warm fuzzy glow in your heart. It might even make you fall in love with the humble cassette all over again. And what could be the harm in that?

| JOHN BITTLES

Voriger Artikel

Kinder, Kinder

Nächster Artikel

Mehr als „Die Antwoord“…

Weitere Artikel der Kategorie »Bittles' Magazine«

The Year To Come!

Bittles‘ Magazin | See the future! Now that we have taken those first tentative steps into 2014 it is hard not to want to curl up into a ball ranting incoherently at the worry of what the new year will bring. Usually, I understandably, drown myself in a year’s supply of whisky just to get through the months of January and February alone. By JOHN BITTLES

Ticket To My Heart: An Interview With Masha Qrella

Music | Bittles’ Magazine: The music column from the end of the world The name Masha Qrella may be new to some, but trust me when I tell you that this is your loss. Over a busy and inspired career the artist has consistently created a wealth of great music, while appearing to always stay true to who she is. By JOHN BITTLES

Introspection Is Overrated Anyway: New Album Reviews

Music | Bittles’ Magazine: The music column from the end of the world Now that we have moved to a monthly format I have had lots of time on my hands. Rather than trying to listen to numerous albums a day I have been able to take my time and get to know the nuances of some hand-picked gems. This month I will be dissecting some of the the best LPs to hit the shops so far this year. We have the haunted electronica of Pye Corner Audio, the emotion rich indie rock of Twilight Sad, the fuzz-filled psychedelica of

Weaving Genres, And Roughing Up Beats: New Album Review

Music | Bittles’ Magazine: The music column from the end of the world Is it just me, or was Record Store Day 2017 a tiny bit crap? The last time I was surrounded by that amount of middle-aged, balding men, reeking of sweat, I had walked into a strip-club by mistake. So, rather than relive the horrors of that day, I will dispense with the waffle and dive straight into the reviews. By JOHN BITTLES

And It’s You That Is The Lovegod

Bittles‘ Magazine | Music Review It was a time when anything seemed possible. The overriding sense of depression had come to an end making the late 80s, early 90s a truly glorious time to be young. Music, sex, drugs and fashion were the key, with the elitism and separatism of the Thatcher years being dissolved in one youth culture movement of inclusiveness and hope. The gap between rap, indie and rave was almost nonexistent, while a wave of E’d up positivism was flooding through the veins of the nation’s teens. These were glorious times indeed! By JOHN BITTLES