YO31 wrote:I disagree. In my experience £ for £, superior audio quality is available from viny playback. You CAN get a CD player really cheap, but it will sound shite. This doesn't bother everybody, but if it does then you'll need to spend at least as much on a CD player to match your vinyl system. A phono-stage (another industry gouge, they used to be part of every integrated amp) can be had for much less than 150 - e.g. NAD / Creek. These are readily available on ebay too.
you can get high quality cd players, like the sony sa-cd types for about $300 or less, I believe. most people think these easily out perform budget vinyl playback. I'm talking under $1000. of course it's relative, but for the most part, cd players are the best bang for the buck.
YO31 wrote:Vinyl will wear out eventually, but I still own the very first LPs I ever bought (in 1979/80) and they still sound fine. Many of them were played on some pretty shocking record players too with no obvious side effects. Dust is an issue, so look after them. I try and look after things I've payed money for so this isn't really an issue. It'a actually pretty hard to scratch a record by accident
if this is the true, then this really supports my case. then why do vinyl people advocate things like aligning the cartridge correctly, weight etc? isn't there also the belief that the needle under the weight and friction actually melts the groove? that doesn't sound good. add to that, the actual manufacturing of LPs, which is not terribly accurate either.
This is how records are made:
the original is created on a lathe, which itself not 100% accurate. this is very much an art, that is practiced by a craftsman.
the disk is one of either two materials: copper or shellac.
the copper disk is preferred, since it reduces the steps involved in growing/generations involved in creating the master stamper, since with copper you can directly create the negative stamper.
with shellac, there are 2 extra generations involved to create the final negative stamper.
generally, in large runs, they will grow multiple copies of the stamper. each will be different.
add to this, the wear factor of the stamping run. if you happen to get a record pressed early in the life span of the negative, you will get a very different record than someone who gets one at the end of it's life. This is why first runs of LPs is kind of a misnomer. in a run of say the first 10K copies of dark side of the moon, you may be getting #1 or #9999. the person who buys the second pressing will be possibly be getting a better remastered version, a better cutting if they choose to recut the original, and perhaps a better negative grown from the original.
YO31 wrote:
True, the free lunch is over but it never really existed outside of major cities. Plus, people are still dumping their collections - there seems to be a glut of 1980s - 90s indie around at the moment. Most of it's terrible, but I've found soem real gems for peanuts.
really? I would think that people outside the city would be among the first to jettison their vinyl. I would think most vinyl afficianados are urban in nature.
YO31 wrote:That's how I prefer to listen to music anyway. Actively. Twenty minutes is pretty much optimum human concentration span. Also, I'm sick of so called 'bonus' tracks screwing up the running order of favoured releases.
I once spent days listening to well tempered piano. culturally, I feel this more than makes up for my having never read moby dick.
YO31 wrote:
This is fine if you can tolerate the desperate audio quality of mp3. Personally, I think it's useful for getting a taster but once I know about a recording that I like, I'll try and track down a physical copy.
Unfortunately, although music distribution is now much more democratic, this democracy has unleashed a tidal wave of excrement amongst which, a few gems can be found. I don't think it's any easier or harder to find good music now than in the past - in fact the two major sources of musical education that I had avaiable as a kid no longer exist: Diversity in music broadcasting - and by this I mean getting the unexpected rather than choosing what you already know; and municipal lending libraries.
my point on distribution was not necessarily dependent on the digital file being an MP3, the much derided format. Of course it can easily be a lossless shorten or flac file, if you choose. still, consumers have become addicted to what they have been told is "value" which actually is significantly of less value in comparison to the original performance. you are buying an empty shell of the original performance, (if not musique concrete, which a large portion of rock is).
and lastly I find your statement about open access resulting in a tidal wave of excrement, wholly disingenuous. I would argue that most people on this board probably feel the opposite, that the centralized business first nature of the music industry has resulted in by far more excrement than individual self produced music. perhaps I am being dense, but it appears that you contradict yourself, and I find it kind of difficult to understand the point you are making.
m.koren wrote:Fuck, I knew it. You're a Blues Lawyer.