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Tuning in together: the rise of communal vinyl listening in Buenos Aires

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yesterday

Music lovers in Buenos Aires are gathering at bars, clubs and theaters equipped with sophisticated hi-fi sound systems and listening to classic albums from start to finish. The trend stands in contrast to the streaming era, where listeners often jump from one track to another from a virtually endless catalog of music.

The scene plays out across the city: audiences gather in dimly lit — and sometimes completely dark— rooms furnished with chairs, cushions or beanbags. Many even switch off their phones to enjoy the experience without distractions, challenging the notion that modern audiences have short attention spans.

Recoleta’s Bimbi-Nilo bar hosts its Escuchas on Tuesday nights, Almagro’s Auditorio Cendas stages Música en total oscuridad (‘Music in total darkness’) on Thursdays, and Chacarita’s Artlab presents Escuchas HiFi on Saturdays. Similar listening sessions have sprung in many other bars, cafés, and cultural centers around the country..

The pioneer of the format is Argentine audio inventor Hugo Zuccarelli, who experimented with holophonic sound systems in the early Eighties. His work even caught the attention of Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters and Michael Jackson, though the record industry later favored Dolby Surround system as a way to enhance sound.

For the past 15 years, Zuccarelli has hosted public listening sessions to showcase his invention, which records audio so accurately that it creates a total spatial illusion. Known as Music in the Dark, the sessions were first held at Teatro Ciego, El Cubo, Vuela El Pez and Uniclub. Eventually, it morphed into a........

© Buenos Aires Herald