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It’s 2026 and the resurgence of everything analog (shooting on actual film, playing music on vinyl) has sparked the collective imagination of, well, collectors. If it's the ritualistic expression of the needle drop on the 12 inch canvas, Tiny Vinyl is the Nashville-born startup that has come up with a fun new concept. They’ve compressed that very ritual into a 4 inch disc that spins at 33⅓ RPM and holds four minutes of music per side. Excuse the pun, but their tiny size makes them natural homes for singles, B-sides and fan-club keepsakes. A sequential TV number on the record and gatefold turns a song into an easily displayed piece of collectible.
Playing back these collectibles don’t require any special cartridge or stylus but some housekeeping is needed. Since the playing area sits only about 1.25 to 1.5 inches from the centre hole, some decks either stop early or cannot travel far enough inward with their tonearms, all you have to do is disable the auto-stop or auto-return if possible, then check if the arm reaches the run-out area while spinning. A manual deck is a safer bet since fully automatic players without that manual override may simply not manage it.
To widen the software’s appeal, Tiny Vinyl now sells a shoebox-sized US$50 Player in the US, with built-in speakers and Bluetooth. Encouraged by their millionth pressing in a year, the turntable was a natural step in providing a complete ecosystem of analog joy-toys. Ofcourse, it is a convenience accessory, not a prerequisite. If you really want to commit to the vinyl life, a decent manual turntable is the saner first investment.
A typical Tiny Vinyl disc weighs 15g against a standard LP's 140g and is made from what the company calls bio-attributed vinyl. It is chemically identical to standard PVC but the process to manufacture it leaves a much smaller carbon footprint, without any adverse effect on the sonic attributes of vinyl. Although sold mostly through their own website at US$14.99 (approx Rs 1500) for a single Tiny Vinyl which holds a track or two, it’s no bargain but the accessibility of the hardware along with the cuteness of the discs themselves is supposed to be the gateway drug for a full-blown journey down the aisle of analog royalty. Think of it as a music postcard that actually plays and provides labels an opportunity to give it a moment of its own like an unreleased acoustic version, a tour-exclusive pairing or artwork worth properly framing. If you’re an artist, you can also reach out to them via their website with a minimum order quantity. It isn’t another audiophile format, and that is precisely the point!