Millions of people still have their old vinyl LPs and would love to hear the music on them, much of which has never (and probably will never) be reissued on CD or other formats. But few of these people still have turntables to play their records on. And most of the people who do have turntables find that their old records are too scratched to listen to, anyway.
A 14-year-old businessman in Cleveland has the solution for all of that.
Jonathan Sender has launched a web-based business, called www.LPtransfer.com, to provide services for transferring music from LPs and cassette tapes to CD.
Not only is the music transferred to CD, but during the process, noise disturbances and background noises, such as pops, clicks, and hisses, are removed to produce a clean, pure sound of a CD recording. And www.LPtransfer.com does all of this at very affordable prices – as much as one-third the cost of similar services offered by other companies.
Sender says: “Our essential goal is to preserve the music of the past so that it can survive in the future. We allow people to save their old music by converting it to a more current recording format – a CD, which is long-lasting and more durable than older recording mediums.”
Sender, who is the sole proprietor of this business, is the recipient of the 2009 BizKids Award from WVIZ TV25 and PBS for www.LPtransfer.com.
Contact Sender at www.LPtransfer.com (website) or info@LPtransfer.com (e-mail).
Photo:
http://www.prlog.org/




