A Czech Company Kept Its Vinyl Factory Alive As CDs And Cassettes Took Over

czech vinyl factory

GZ Media’s vinyl record factory in Lodenice, Czech Republic, driven by a global explosion of interest in vinyl, the company expects to produce around 20 million albums this year.

“I realized when I came to the company 33 years ago that vinyl would be finished one day,” said Mr. Pelc, 64, who now owns GZ Media and serves as president. “But I wanted our company to be the last one to stop making them.”

The trajectory of the company — and the village it once dominated — traces the Czech Republic’s transition to quirky capitalist colt from cranky Communist nag, all played to the kind of rock soundtrack that accompanies many modern Czech tales.

Instead of getting rid of the old equipment and moving CD-making machines into their space — as most music production companies around the world did in the late 1980s and early ’90s — Mr. Pelc kept only enough machines running to meet the dwindling demand, moving the rest into storage and cannibalizing their parts as needed.

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