A mini-LP or mini-album is a short record album or LP, usually retailing at a lower price than an album that would be considered full-length. It is distinct from an EP due to containing more tracks and a slightly longer running length. A mini-LP is not to be confused with the Japanese CDs issued in a "mini LP sleeve" or "paper jacket".
Its running time is shorter than the typical album but longer than a single album.[1] It is sometimes synonymous with extended play, especially in East Asia music market.[2] However, some music distributors may classify mini albums with 7 or more songs as an album.[3] In the United States, The Recording Academy's rules for Grammy Awards state that an album must comprise a minimum total playing time of 15 minutes with at least five distinct tracks or a minimum total playing time of 30 minutes with no minimum track requirement.[4] In the United Kingdom, the criteria for the UK Albums Chart is that a recording counts as an "album" if it either has more than four tracks or lasts more than 25 minutes.[5]
East Asia music market
In South Korea, a mini album (Korean: 미니앨범) is a promotional term for a release that has less of a budget than a "full album". A mini album can also be called an EP. A release that has an expensive budget (excluding music video production cost) is called a "full album", also known as an studio album.[6][7][8] In some instances, a mini-LP is also called a full album, although it only has 6 or 7 tracks. An example would be Face by Jimin. This also applies to Japanese releases by South Korean artists.
In some cases, artists have used the chronological placement of a mini album in their discography as part of the title of the release. For example, 2NE1 1st Mini Album and Taste of Love: The 10th Mini Album (note that both are considered EPs, not mini-LPs).
History
Mini-LPs became popular in the early 1980s with record companies targeting consumers who were reluctant to buy full-length and full-priced albums.[9] Several mini-LPs had been released in the late 1970s, including John Cooper Clarke's Walking Back to Happiness, which used the 10-inch format.[10] The format was usually 12-inch or 10-inch vinyl, with a playing time of between twenty and thirty minutes, and around seven tracks.[11] They were often used as a way of introducing new acts to the market or as a way of releasing interim albums by established acts between their main albums.[9]Epic Records introduced the 10-inch Nu-Disk format in the early 1980s (an example being Cheap Trick's 1980 release Found All the Parts), but they found it difficult to merchandise, and 12-inch mini-LPs became more common.[9] Notable mini-LPs of the early 1980s included U2's Under a Blood Red Sky, which reached number 2 on the UK Albums Chart in 1983,[12] and The Honeydrippers' Volume 1, which reached number 4 on the Billboard 200 in 1984.[11][13]