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Re: [ARSCLIST] The Future of RECORD Collecting - an interesting documentary



Yes, the scratching can be destructive, but few serious turntablists would sacrifice a record they could never find again. Also, many DJs only mix their records together and don't scratch at all; this is not just a hip-hop thing, you know. And once a record becomes known by way of a DJ's set, it's very likely to be reissued (often legally!).
It might be worth noting that not everyone in ARSC is unfamiliar with this culture, or looks upon more contemporary popular music with such disdain. Some of us treat a rare early 1980's rap 12" with as much care as a Victor Monarch. There's a magazine that closely follows the Scratch aesthetic called Wax Poetics < http://www.waxpoetics.com/ >. While often frustrating in their lack of pre-funk knowledge (names mispelled, etc.), they do a fine job with what they do know. As long as there's a collector for every object...


Regards,
Franz Kunst

Quoting Tom Fine <tflists@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx>:

Question: isn't "scratching" destructive to potentially out-of-print or valuable LPs? If


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