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Guest Post by Steph Colbourn on Soundfly's FlypaperWhen I was 13 I made a cassette tape for my crush. It was the summer before I was going into grade 9 and, like any preteen and probably any artist, I was too overwhelmed to be able to put feelings into words. Instead I recorded 10 of my favorite songs onto a tape, and interspersed them with my admiration (pretty embarrassing vocal ramblings).We started dating a few days later.It was the 90s. CDs were ubiquitously popular, but cassettes had that raw, gritty sound that still seemed to say “I’m outside your window with a boombox.” Since then, things have changed. I’ve had 5 iPods, too many dates, and my current laptop has evolved past even having a CD drive.Cassettes have become a tool for making music. Relying on their sonic qualities, like those beloved clicks and whirrs, and the clunky, distinctive players that can truly access the most crystalline nostalgic moments, artists have reinvented this medium for playback into a medium for composition. Here are three of my faves…+ Read more: Cassettes aren’t the only way artists are turning the medium into the message. Explore how vinyl is being repurposed to create new sonic possibilities with “5 Innovative Things You Can Only Do with Vinyl.”1. Aki Onda

2. Lucas Crane — Nonhorse

3. Liz Harris — Grouper

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