Warning! This page contains information regarding Star Trek: Lower Decks, and thus may contain spoilers.
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A vinyl record was a grooved disc with recorded music that could be played on a record player.
In an alternate timeline, Jonathan Archer and Alicia Travers listened to "My Old Flame", on a Billie Holiday record. Unfortunately it was against the law to listen to black music, because the United States was under the rule of the Nazis. (ENT: "Storm Front")
In an alternate 2259, James T. Kirk was playing Body Movin' from a Beastie Boys record while he was having sex with Caitian twins. (Star Trek Into Darkness)
Captain William T. Riker had vinyl records mounted on the wall of his ready room on the USS Titan in 2381. (LD: "Kayshon, His Eyes Open")
N'ob's was a music store at Starbase 80 that sold records. (LD: "Starbase 80?!")
In 2399, Cristóbal Rios owned a library of vinyl records and kept them in his quarters aboard La Sirena. (PIC: "Broken Pieces")
According to Michael Chabon, on his Instagram account, [1] this library of vinyl records was originally owned by Captain Alonzo Vandermeer.
While inside a complex quantum simulation, a copy of Data was listening to a record on his record player. The song that was playing was Blue Skies, which he listened to while in the real world, Jean-Luc Picard was deactivating his program, thus ending the simulation and by extension, Data's life. (PIC: "Et in Arcadia Ego, Part 2")