http://www.detnews.com/article/20090502/BIZ/905020367/1001/Vinyl-records-firm-presses-on

Still spinning Vinyl records firm presses on

Louis Aguilar / The Detroit News

Detroit -- If ever a National Register of Historic, Cool,
Hard-core, 20th-Century Machinery is created, Archer Record
Pressing would be a landmark.

Archer is one of the last companies in the world still
making vinyl records -- a technology the corporate music
industry decided to banish four decades ago.

This third-generation family business doesn't fear the
death of vinyl: There's always a subculture of musicians
that want their work on albums. Archer fears its massive
record machines will die. And the machines constantly break
down.

"We rely on the best of 1970s technology," said Joe Archer,
whose father Norm, started the business in 1965.

The company has no choice. The last record-making machine
is believed to have been made in 1986, according to various
Web sites dedicated to vinyl records.

The five presses at Archer were bought from the other
record press companies that went under decades ago.

A sole company in North America sells the specialized parts
for the machines. At its core, a record-making machine is a
hydraulic press with a closing force of 100 tons. It has
steam pipes, tubes, buttons, motors, molds and mechanical
doo-dads specific to mass-producing vinyl.

In operation, the machines produce a kind of score of heavy
industry sounds. The boom of the press can be heard a half-
block away. There's a rhythm of hissing steam, a hydraulic
whoosh, a high-pitched metallic slice, the low rumble of a
generator.

Few know how to fix the record machines. One is Mike
Archer, 43, who learned by growing up watching Joe, his
father, fix them.

"It's a daily battle," Mike Archer said. "They're finicky
machines. If your scrap rate starts going up, you start
looking at the press and say, 'All right, what are you
doing to me today?'" Scrap rate refers to the number of
defective records.

"You try to isolate what's happening and narrow it down,
narrow it down. Is it pneumatic? Electrical? Steam? Most
times, it's an issue that takes two or three minutes to
deal with. Sometimes, you can scratch your head for two or
three hours. Once every couple months, you can feel like
the sky is falling."

It is unclear how many record-making companies still exist.
Web sites count between eight and 10 worldwide, and three
to five in the United States.

Mike Archer knows of two that went under during the past
year because their aging owners could not find anyone who
wanted to take them over.

Archer has two full-time employees, including 25-year
veteran Ken Moravcik. But only Mike and Joe know how to fix
the machines.

"It would be a steep learning curve, but you could do it,"
Mike Archer said. "It's too bad we can't get some
apprenticeship program going."

Archer Record Pressing is a landmark to some, including
employee Andy Garcia, 33, a devotee of Detroit techno
music.

"It's almost holy to me," he said.

Archer Records has survived thanks in no small part to the
many Detroit techno artists who rely on vinyl to spin
during their performances. Virtually every major Detroit
techno artist, who often has their own record label, relies
on Archer.

"Every album I ever (bought) had Archer Record on it," said
Garcia, who grew up in Anderson, Ind. "When I moved to
Detroit, I begged for a job here. I remember when I first
came, I thought the place would be a little more
spectacular.

"Detroit's like that: It's spectacular where it counts."

Another fan is longtime client Theo Parrish, an
international techno artist whose label Sound Signature has
had more than 30 albums made at Archer.

"Some of the most amazing dance records that have come out
in the last 10 years have come out of this place," Parrish
said.

He often stops by Archer when his albums are being pressed.
"My thoughts are being translated into the physical
universe right there. It's beautiful to see."

Parrish has been so moved by the sounds of the machines
that he's producing a song based on them.

"That's one of the hearts of industrial Detroit to me," he
said.

Archer has enjoyed a recent bounce in sales, although the
owners decline to reveal specific figures.

"The iPod and file-sharing have actually been good to us.
Some artists, especially independent rock bands, always
want to ensure that enough people are actually buying their
product," instead of downloading it for free, Mike Archer
said.

"Vinyl will always be around. Whether there will be someone
who has the will to mass-produce them? It can be done.

"But if someone will do it? That's a good question."

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