The Handmade Revival: Why Cassettes and Zines Still Matter in a Digital Age

In an era of algorithmic playlists, hyper-polished streaming platforms, and instant access to everything, you’d think the humble cassette tape and photocopied zine would’ve gone extinct long ago. But here we are—watching a growing wave of artists return to these tactile formats not out of nostalgia, but necessity. And maybe a little rebellion.

It’s not just a retro trend—it’s a handmade revival.

What Cassettes Still Give Us

Cassettes are imperfect. They hiss. They warp. They stretch with time. But they carry something digital can’t touch: presence.

When you dub a tape yourself, when you handwrite a label, when you slip it into a case with a folded J-card that you printed at home—it becomes yours. Listeners know it. Artists feel it. It slows the transaction down into something resembling intention.

Zach Winfield, who records ambient loops in his attic under the name Sleep Dust, told GAJOOB:

“I started releasing on tape because it felt like I was sending a small sculpture to someone. It’s playable, but it’s also just… real.”

Cassettes also let artists release without a gatekeeper. No need to pay for pressing plants, streaming services, or metadata input fields. A dual-deck boombox and a stack of blanks still work just fine.

Zines as Sonic Diaries

Alongside the music, a new wave of artists is making zines to document their work. Some include lyrics. Others document their process or scene. Many go weird in the best ways—collage art, found poetry, scraps of personal memory. It’s like a liner note exploded into its own world.

Take Peel Mode, a zine that comes bundled with compilation tapes out of Chicago. The pages are layered with scribbles, lists, tape reviews, drawings of weird machines, and the occasional pizza coupon from the ’90s.

Why bother with paper? According to creator Ali Vane,

“I wanted something you can crumple, fold, and spill coffee on. Something you’d maybe leave on your floor and rediscover later, instead of scrolling past it in your feed.”

Zines give artists a space to be unfiltered and anti-algorithm. No SEO. No data tracking. Just stories, ideas, and noise.

The Emotional Layer

There’s also something emotional about holding a cassette or zine made by a stranger who just wanted you to have it. That kind of intimacy doesn’t scale well. And that’s the point.

We’re not saying digital is dead. But this handmade revival shows that some artists—and their fans—want more than bandwidth. They want weight.

Join the Revival

Want to make your own zine or tape? GAJOOB’s working on downloadable templates and starter kits. Got one to share? We want to review it. This movement is messy, brilliant, and growing.

Let’s keep it that way.

Discover Zines is a blog by Briyan Frederick Baker (GAJOOB, Tapegerm Collective) about zines. Zines are often a personal endeavor, but they are also an experience that engages communities of all kinds, whether its local, family, fans, interests, demographics, business and other organizations. Zines provide an authentic, direct way to connect with people in a unique way.

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