dunpeal2064 wrote:Those Incubus records are awesome. Did they do Fungus as well?
Fungus Amongus and
If Not Now, When? are the only two albums they didn't do. My theory is that
If Not Now, When? was just recently released on vinyl anyway (though a reprint would have been nice since you can't find it new in stock anywhere). Fungus, I don't think Incubus really considers it to be a true album. Just a fun collection of songs that they re-released under the Sony label because of fan demand (they even apologize for it in the album jacket lol).
MulishaSoldier929 wrote:Funny you have 2112 up there.... I'm listening to it right now

. If you don't mind me asking, how much did you pick it up for?
Six bucks!
dsheinem wrote:Aside from nostalgia/novelty, I've never really understood the appeal from an audio standpoint. The artists didn't (usually) create the music with random fuzz and pops in mind, records degrade over time, they aren't "warm" in the same way that high end analog tape is, etc. The vinyl I own is stuff I can't get elsewhere, bought due to novelty/price, or collector's items of bands I like.
That's why you have to take proper care of your vinyls, so you don't get those clicks and pops. Of course, it some times can't be avoided when you buy used vinyls.
From a pure audio standpoint, you'll hear arguments why vinyl is better or why CD is better. One thing that you can't argue, that is pure straight fact, is that some times an album is
compressed to shit on CD but it's vinyl counterpart isn't. I've heard worse clicks on pops on brand new CDs, released in the past decade, than on any of my vinyls.
There's also just the fun of playing a vinyl. There's something magical about putting a record on the platter and spinning it up, no other form of playing music can compare. I would compare it to the emulation vs real hardware debate of the gaming realm.