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The Vinyl Paradox: Why independent record stores are struggling despite the boom in physical media

Across Europe, a troubling trend is emerging: more and more beloved music and vinyl shops are closing their doors for good.

Despite there being a resurgence in vinyl sales - driven largely by a craving for physical media and nostalgic experiences in an increasingly digital world - many independent record and music stores are facing an uphill battle against rising rent prices and the gentrification of local communities, often spurred by tourism.

Take Tattoo Records for example, located in Piazzetta Nilo in Naples, Italy. After 41 years of dedicated service, owner Enzo Pone recently announced its closure this week: "Piazzetta Nilo, in recent years has become a reality that is not so easy to live professionally for those who tend to sell a product other than a pizza or a smelly cuoppo of badly defrosted fish.”

He added, on a statement posted to social media: "You make less money with jazz than with pizza."

A post shared by Tattoo Records (@tattoorecords)

Elsewhere, a staple in the revived Brussels vinyl scene Dust Dealers, shut up shop last month. And in Spain, the historic Casa Beethoven, which began trading on Las Ramblas in Barcelona in 1880 and today has a catalogue of more than 70,000 music scores, fears it could suffer the same fate.

“These type of shops are like the Titanic, slowly sinking. The sinking isn’t fast for us because we are open most hours and we are located in Las Ramblas where many people walk by, this allows us to survive," says Jaume Doncos, co-owner of Casa Beethoven.

He adds: "I think it will depend on when we decide to retire. We see the thinking and we know the final is inevitable."

But surprisingly, while many of these shops are vulnerable to closure, the vinyl market is flourishing globally. In the

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