Singer songwriter Billie Eilish faced pushback online this week after criticising artists for releasing multiple vinyl variants. In response, she said she wasn’t targeting any one artist in particular.
Billie Eilish made it clear last week that she doesn’t like artists releasing multiple versions of their albums on vinyl, describing the practice as ‘wasteful’ in an interview with Billboard last week.
The singer and her mother Maggie Baird had been discussing environmental activism and their efforts to make vinyl pressings more sustainable.
During the conversation, Billie said that she felt ‘it’s very important to some artists to make all sorts of different vinyl and packaging, which ups the sales and ups the numbers and gets them more money.’
‘I can’t even express to you how wasteful it is,’ she stated.
‘I find it really frustrating as somebody who goes out of my way to be sustainable and do the best I can. Then some of the biggest artists in the world make […] 40 different vinyl packages that have a different unique thing just to get you to keep buying more.’
These comments, while not deliberately targeted at any one act or artist, were largely taken as a dig toward Taylor Swift. Her team is notorious for using special edition vinyl prints for album drops.
Her latest record, ‘The Tortured Poets Department’, is scheduled to release later this month.
As part of its rollout, Taylor announced three different versions of the vinyl pressing in February, each one including its own bonus song. This effectively means that if fans want every song on physical vinyl, they’ll need to purchase all three.
File Name: The Albatross 🤍
Pre-order the new edition of THE TORTURED POETS DEPARTMENT with exclusive bonus track “The Albatross”on my website nowhttps://t.co/BAtr2MpPIs📷: Beth Garrabrant pic.twitter.com/62Bmrc5zs5
— Taylor Swift (@taylorswift13) February 23, 2024
She used a similar tactic with her album ‘Midnights’. The back cover of the vinyl sleeve included a clock face that was split into four parts. If you wanted to complete the image, all four needed to be purchased. Her merchandise store also includes six different colour vinyl variants.
Her previous record, ‘Folklore’, had eight vinyl variants.
A few years ago, we wrote about Jack White’s vinyl plea to major labels to address this problem.
He urged the big three to increase their vinyl production and prevent bottlenecking of materials and prints. This issue was partly caused by the pandemic, but was also a result of the world’s most popular artists clogging up resources and unfairly allocating factory time to produce hundreds of thousands of vinyl for one album.
Taylor and Adele were two prominent examples that were hogging up time and money – so much so that some independent record stores boycotted stocking Adele’s ‘30’ album.