 Let's have a look. There is a romance to having a physical vinyl. I mean you take for instance, you take a David Bowie record, you have like the artwork and you get to see it in physical form and you know it's large as well. So instead of just that kind of tiny little thumbnail on a computer that you're seeing it's like you get to appreciate it as a concept. It kind of encourages you to listen to an album start to finish as opposed to just playing the songs you like and I think then you really get to understand an album as a piece of art as opposed to a collection of songs I guess. The first time I tried to mix vinyl in the club went terribly. I was train wrecking, there was no way near in time but it was fine because I thought it looked cool. Bob Marley was kind of the first record that I ever bought. I guess everyone should own a Bob Marley record. Growing up there wasn't loads of music in the house it was really something that I discovered in spite of that. I was sort of watching a lot of MTV and it was when Nechings and Timberluna people like that was my entry point I guess in terms of that kind of pop music was a gateway to sort of more classic hip hop and stuff I think as well. I read a statistic actually that 65% of commercial radio play in the USA was produced by the Nechings at one point. It was like 60% of all records on radio was made by Pharrell and Chad which was just crazy. I was looking through this now and I found this, Nechings Presents Clones which for me is such an important album. I think I talk about the Nechings a little bit too much but my biggest influences and I think that this album is so important it's them as producers producing an artist's album it's rather than them just producing for other people this is them putting a stamp on a project and saying this is us the Neptune and stepping to the forefront. I've been working on my three part album for about the past year now so I came up with this concept Dusk, Dark and Dawn the sort of three different stages in the night out and one of the reasons for doing that is I wanted to incorporate all the different styles that I produce and not feel kind of confined to one genre for the album and one of the genres that greatly influenced Dusk the first part was kind of West Coast Hip Hop and G Funk and stuff I wanted people to listen to each part, start to finish you know I think that there's some appreciation lost when things are in digital because there is so much more music readily available like the click of a button. I think it's really good that Byron was making a comeback and hopefully it's here to stay.