YankoDesign

This Brutalist Vinyl Turntable Hides the Tonearm So Well It Feels Like a Massive CD Deck

For something built to play vinyl, the PP-1 barely behaves like a turntable at all. There’s no tonearm visually staking its claim across the platter, no exposed hardware reminding you this is an analog ritual machine. Instead, it looks like someone took the clean, self-contained logic of a CD player, scaled it up to 12-inch proportions, and cut a perfect circle into a block of aluminum. The result feels less like retro audio gear and more like a playback object from a timeline where physical media never split into “old” and “new.”

That is what makes the PP-1 so compelling from a design standpoint. Most modern record players still rely on nostalgia, warm wood finishes, visible mechanics, and a kind of ceremonial analog theater. This one strips all of that away and replaces it with something colder, flatter, and far more architectural. The record becomes the only familiar visual cue, while the machine itself recedes into a monolithic slab that feels closer to a giant CD deck than a classic turntable. Instead of celebrating vinyl as a vintage artifact, the PP-1 imagines what the format might have looked like if it had evolved with the same minimalist confidence as the best consumer electronics.

Designer: Waiting For Ideas

The record goes in upside down, and from there the PP-1 takes over entirely. A reading mechanism built into the platter operates from beneath the vinyl surface rather than above it, which is how the tonearm vanishes without taking the music with it. A built-in sensor automatically detects whether the record spins at 33 or 45 RPM and adjusts accordingly, eliminating the last manual decision from the process. An integrated phono preamp and headphone amplifier live inside the body, so headphone listening requires nothing additional. The interaction reduces to its absolute minimum: place the record, press one of two small buttons on the face, and listen.

The body itself is milled from a solid block of aluminum, not pressed or assembled from parts, which gives the PP-1 a physical density that conventionally built decks cannot replicate. That mass serves a genuine acoustic purpose, as solid aluminum controls resonance and vibration more effectively than the hollowed wood plinths that most turntables rely on. The PP-1 can also stand and play upright, the record spinning horizontally against a vertical body, and Waiting For Ideas leans into this configuration in their product photography for obvious reasons. In that orientation, the turntable sheds the last visual connection to hi-fi equipment. It looks like a wall piece, a square of brushed metal with a circle cut into it.

Most of the vinyl revival has traded on nostalgia, warm wood finishes, visible cartridges, and retro typography that signals the ritual of analog listening as much as the listening itself. The PP-1 belongs to a different tradition entirely, closer to the restrained, function-forward product language of Dieter Rams at Braun and Bang & Olufsen at its mid-century peak, where the object earns its presence through formal clarity rather than decorative signaling. It launches at €5,800 (roughly $6,050), made to order, placing it in genuine high-end turntable territory alongside decks from Rega, Pro-Ject, and Clearaudio, all of which look considerably more conventional by comparison. Whether audiophiles make peace with the tonearm-free setup is a legitimate debate. The design argument the PP-1 makes is considerably harder to dismiss.

The post This Brutalist Vinyl Turntable Hides the Tonearm So Well It Feels Like a Massive CD Deck first appeared on Yanko Design.

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