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The Vinyl Guide - Artist Interviews for Record Collectors and Music Nerds

Ep490: Saving Vinyl - Rescuing Australia's Last Record Press

The Vinyl Guide - Artist Interviews for Record Collectors and Music Nerds

Nate Goyer

Music, Music History, Music Interviews

4.7579 Ratings

🗓️ 24 March 2025

⏱️ 62 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

Despite having no manufacturing experience, Nick Phillips (The Breadmakers, Corduroy Records) impulsively bought Australia's last vinyl pressing equipment, not only saving it from the scrap heap, but creating an Australian vinyl legacy and spirit that continues through today's modern pressing plants.

Topics Include:

  • Introduction of Nick Phillips and his vinyl industry background.
  • Early records on Mr Spaceman – label-mates with Cosmic Psychos
  • How Nick impulsively bought a record factory in Sydney.
  • Nick had no manufacturing experience before buying the equipment.
  • The equipment cost approximately $6,000 in 1989-1990.
  • Nick moved the vinyl pressing equipment to Melbourne.
  • Finding an affordable factory space in McKinnon, Melbourne.
  • The labor-intensive nature of hand-pressed vinyl record production.
  • Description of the vinyl manufacturing process with electroplating.
  • Need to import vinyl pellets from California after local supply ended.
  • The machines were 1960s Swedish Alpha Toolex presses.
  • Typical daily production of 500 albums or 800 seven-inches.
  • Discussion of major artists pressed at Corduroy Records.
  • Direct-to-acetate recordings as a significant part of operations.
  • Sonic Youth's visit to record direct-to-acetate - "Melbourne Direct" record
  • The White Stripes recording session that didn't go smoothly.
  • How the White Stripes acetates were transferred to Third Man Records
  • Corduroy's unusual business model of charging majors more.
  • Employee requirement to run their own record labels.
  • Nick's perspective on running a business more for passion.
  • The origin of the Corduroy Records name.
  • Why they added "& Detective Agency" to the business name.
  • Their one failed detective case involving counterfeit Nike socks.
  • Financial challenges of running the pressing plant.
  • How EMI and other labels sued Corduroy for copyright infringement.
  • The factory relocation costs that contributed to closing.
  • Selling the equipment to Obese Records/future Zenith Records.
  • How Hilltop Hoods went from customers to part-owners.
  • The machines are still operating today at Zenith Records.
  • Nick's band The Breadmakers has been active for 35 years.
  • The Breadmakers' consistent 1960s R&B sound over decades.
  • The new Breadmakers album "Lonesome Sundown."
  • Nick's satisfaction at keeping vinyl alive in Australia.
  • Directing listeners to thebreadmakers.bandcamp.com for music.
  • Interview wrap up

EXTENDED, Commercial free, high resolution version of this podcast is available at: www.Patreon.com/VinylGuide

Listen on Apple: https://apple.co/2Y6ORU0
Listen on Spotify: https://spoti.fi/36qhlc8

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, record nerds, check out the next level audiophile furniture at sidetracked workshop.com.

0:05.9

Sidestracked Workshop makes beautiful record furniture.

0:08.6

I personally have a sidetracked workshop double sidekick in my house, and it's not only gorgeous, but incredibly practical.

0:14.6

Check them out for yourself at sidetracked workshop.com.

0:17.8

Don't keep your records and crates, and don't trust that feeble IKEA furniture. Give your vinyl the respect it deserves with furniture from sidetracked workshop.com. And now on with the show.

0:30.6

Welcome to the vinyl guide. The podcast for record collectors and music nerds. Here's your host, the biggest record nerd of them all, Nate Goyer.

0:39.2

Hey, everyone, it's Nate.

0:40.8

Welcome to episode 490 of The Vinyl Guide, the podcast for record collectors and music nerds.

0:48.0

Oh my God, episode 490.

0:49.2

I better start working on episode 500.

0:51.1

That's going to come up quick.

0:53.1

Yeah, hey, very cool episode today. I think everyone's

0:57.0

going to enjoy this one. We talked to Nick Phillips, who's in a band called The Breadmakers

1:02.5

down here in Australia. And Nick is going to share the story today about his time leading

1:08.8

Corderoi Records, which was at one time Australia's last

1:14.1

record pressing plant. It's an incredible story. On an absolute whim, Nick bought a record pressing

1:21.1

factory in the early 90s. He was going out of business. He got all the equipment for $6,000

1:26.8

while having zero knowledge of how to make records.

1:31.6

All he knew was he loved the vinyl medium, and he didn't want to let it die.

1:36.7

Nick managed to get everything up and going, learn what he needed to know about making vinyl records,

1:41.8

and he ended up successfully running the last record-pressing

1:46.2

plant in the southern hemisphere from the 90s into the early 2000s. Nick literally kept the art

...

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