TAPE BLAB BLOG
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How to Release Your First Cassette Tape (Without a Label)
Step-by-step guide to releasing your first cassette tape without a label: planning, duplication, artwork, pricing, and DIY tips for underground artists.
Why Cassette Tapes Refuse to Die: 2025 Edition
That dusty Walkman in your drawer might be more alive than you think. In 2025, people aren’t just collecting cassettes as retro trophies — they’re actively hunting them, pressing new runs, and treating them as cultural artifacts.
Cassette tape sales jumped 204.7% in Q1 2025, reaching 63,288 units in the U.S. — while CD sales simultaneously dipped. Headphonesty This kind of spike is impossible to chalk up to idle nostalgia alone. No — this is a cultural, economic, and symbolic revival.
Why Cassette Tapes Still Matter in 2025 for Underground Artists
Why cassette tapes still matter in 2025 for underground and independent artists: physical releases, scarcity, sound, and why tapes still beat pure digital.
DURTY BOUNCE Video Out Now
We just dropped a short for an unreleased track called DURTY BOUNCE—a crusty little number built live on a Kaossilator, laced with harmonies from the Omnichord. No edits, no overdubs. Just raw bounce, straight to tape.
How to Make Art on Tape
Cassette tapes are more than sound vessels. They’re sculpture. Ritual. Tactile relics. Each one a small object charged with intention — magnetic and otherwise.
If you’re here looking for a guide on how to make art on tape, understand this: it’s not about format fetishism. It’s about objecthood. About shaping a physical artifact that says something — even before it plays.
How to Make the Perfect Mixtape (Without Being Cringe)
Learn how to make the perfect romantic mixtape without sounding cheesy. From sequencing tips to must-have Tape Lab tracks, this guide keeps it personal, honest, and totally not cringe.
Why Underground Labels Still Use Cassettes in 2025
It’s 2025. Streaming platforms are algorithmic slot machines. Vinyl is backed up for six months. CDs are a meme. And yet — underground labels are still dropping limited-run cassette tapes, and not as a throwback gimmick. This isn’t nostalgia. It’s strategy.
As the mainstream doubles down on frictionless consumption, tape remains a contrarian ritual. A tactile way to say: “This release matters.” Here’s why.
REVIEW: We Are Rewind Tape Deck
Beautiful, But Bluetooth Still Sounds Brown
TLDR: The design is great and features are ALMOST exactly what a real cassette lover would need. Just don’t bother with the Bluetooth.
ABOUT TAPE BLAB BLOG
The Tape Blab Blog is an up-to-the-minute feed for all things Tape Lab. We’ve got DIY and How-To Guides, Tape Lab Lore, Official Merch Drops, and Updates on our latest music.