Collection: Electronic vinyl records & LPs

Browse electronic vinyl records and LPs from across the genre, including ambient, downtempo, experimental electronic, and synth-driven releases. Discover new and used vinyl, reissues, and collector editions from leading artists and labels at RecordPusher.com.

Electronic Vinyl Records for Collectors and Listeners

Electronic vinyl records at RecordPusher.com cover a wide spectrum of classic, modern, new, and second‑hand releases for listeners who prefer electronic music in a physical format. This category lets you browse styles, formats, and editions, whether you are looking for a carefully sequenced album, a dance‑focused 12‑inch, an atmospheric listening record, or a collectible pressing from a favourite label. The selection can include ambient, experimental electronic, downtempo, leftfield, synth‑driven, and electronic‑adjacent releases, offering both new listeners and experienced collectors many ways to explore the genre.

Many electronic albums on vinyl are valued not only for sound quality but also for artwork, label details, sleeve design, and edition history. Some titles appear in more than one listing because different pressings, formats, or variants are available separately. That is useful when comparing electronic LP records, 2LP editions, reissues, and older used copies. Across RecordPusher.com, the wider vinyl selection includes more than 14,000 titles across genres, with electronic music sitting alongside rock, jazz, soul, metal, hip hop, and more. If you are comparing genres while building a collection, the store also includes Hip Hop Vinyl Records for listeners who enjoy beat‑driven music from different scenes.

What You Will Find in the Electronic Vinyl Collection

The electronic vinyl collection brings together records for different listening habits, from focused headphone sessions to full‑room playback on a hi‑fi setup. Depending on availability, you may find releases by artists such as Aphex Twin, Air, Atoms For Peace, Actress, Animal Collective, Ólafur Arnalds, African Head Charge, and others that illustrate the breadth of electronic music on record. The category is not limited to one narrow subgenre. It can include ambient vinyl records, experimental electronic releases, downtempo albums, electronic pop, dub‑influenced productions, soundscape‑focused releases, and rhythm‑led records.

Formats can vary from standard LPs to 2LP editions, EPs, compilations, live recordings, and special pressings. A 2LP edition is often chosen when a longer album benefits from more space across the sides, while an EP or 12‑inch may include remixes, extended versions, or tracks intended for DJs and club sound systems. Compilation releases are also common in electronic music because labels and scenes frequently shape the listening experience as much as individual artists do. Shoppers looking for recent additions can browse New Vinyl Records, where recent arrivals may include electronic titles alongside other genres. When a title appears more than once, check pressing details such as country of origin, label number, and condition to choose the version that fits your collection.

How to Choose the Right Electronic Vinyl Record

Choosing between electronic vinyl records often starts with format. A single LP is a practical choice for many albums, while a 2LP version can be preferred when longer tracks, deep bass, and spacious production benefit from being spread across additional sides. EPs and 12‑inch releases are central to electronic music because they may include extended mixes, alternate versions, or tracks originally intended for DJs and club systems. If you are shopping for a specific release, compare format and tracklist so the record matches the version you want.

Pressing and label information also matters. Collectors may look for a particular reissue, original pressing, country, or label such as Warp, Ninja Tune, XL Recordings, Parlophone, EMI, or Domino, depending on artist, style, and pressing history. For rare and used vinyl at RecordPusher.com, both the vinyl and cover are graded and listings include details such as record company, label number, country of origin, and sleeve condition. Grading is intentionally conservative to help set clear expectations. New vinyl records are typically factory sealed; if a manufacturing defect is reported, RecordPusher offers replacement or refund options according to the store’s terms. If you are upgrading your setup at the same time, choosing the right Turntables and accessories can support better playback.

Why Electronic Vinyl Appeals to Collectors and Makes a Good Gift

Many people choose electronic vinyl because the format can emphasise musical structure and the physical identity of a release. Long‑form sequencing, extended mixes, textured production, sleeve artwork, label design, and inserts can all contribute to the listening experience. For fans of artists such as Aphex Twin, Air, Ólafur Arnalds, and other electronic or electronic‑adjacent artists, owning an album on vinyl can make listening to the work feel more deliberate than playing a single track in isolation. It also gives the record a place on the shelf and makes the album easier to revisit as a complete work.

This makes electronic vinyl a popular option for gifts. A carefully chosen LP can suit a longtime collector, a newer listener starting a genre shelf, or someone who enjoys design‑led physical music formats. The category can include accessible electronic albums, niche experimental titles, recognised label releases, and second‑hand finds with collector appeal. RecordPusher.com also offers related items such as headphones, posters, books, t‑shirts, mugs, and other music merchandise to help shape a broader gift idea without taking focus away from the record itself. When browsing with budget in mind, selected Vinyl Offers may include electronic releases as part of the wider store assortment.

Frequently Asked Questions

  • What are electronic vinyl records? Electronic vinyl records are physical vinyl releases that feature electronic music, including styles such as ambient, experimental electronic, downtempo, synth‑based music, electronic pop, and club‑oriented productions.
  • Which electronic albums are good on vinyl? Many listeners prefer electronic albums on vinyl when the release has strong sequencing, detailed production, memorable artwork, or extended tracks. Artists such as Aphex Twin, Air, Actress, and Ólafur Arnalds are often good starting points depending on your taste.
  • What does 2LP mean on an electronic vinyl release? 2LP means the release is spread across two vinyl records. This can be helpful for longer electronic albums because the music has more space across the sides and it can allow for additional tracks or alternate sequencing.
  • How do I choose the right pressing of an electronic record? Compare the label, country of origin, production year, release year, tracklist, format, and condition. If several versions of the same title are listed, these details help identify the edition that best fits your collection.
  • Are used electronic vinyl records a good buy? Used electronic records can be a good option when the grading and listing details are clear. At RecordPusher.com, rare and used vinyl includes separate ratings for both vinyl and cover, along with label number, country of origin, and sleeve condition details.
  • Which labels are commonly represented in electronic vinyl? Electronic vinyl collectors often look for releases from labels such as Warp, Ninja Tune, XL Recordings, Parlophone, EMI, Domino, and related imprints, depending on artist, style, and pressing history.