Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
- MyNameIsVince
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
I grew up listening to vinyl as a kid. That was what my parents had. It was pretty awesome for the time.
In fact, I can provide this photo as proof:
Yes. That's me, as a kid, playing drums for the first time in my life, to Phil Collins. Nuff said.
Also there are some photos apparently of myself as kid with Madonna records (one of which I apparently was chewing on the Like a Virgin vinyl, but I have no idea where they are. Probably for the best because I don't know if I would be embarrassed by them or not.
Unfortunately, all my parents' old vinyl records got ruined because of the heat from being stored in our garage shortly after we moved. We did sort of prepare beforehand by buying CDs pretty early when they started becoming popular.
So no, we no longer have vinyl. And to be honest, I don't really have much interest in vinyl. Our family doesn't have a record player anymore, and if anything, I would collect vinyl just to say I have it, but not for actually listening to music. I still prefer CDs by a long shot.
In fact, I can provide this photo as proof:
Yes. That's me, as a kid, playing drums for the first time in my life, to Phil Collins. Nuff said.
Also there are some photos apparently of myself as kid with Madonna records (one of which I apparently was chewing on the Like a Virgin vinyl, but I have no idea where they are. Probably for the best because I don't know if I would be embarrassed by them or not.
Unfortunately, all my parents' old vinyl records got ruined because of the heat from being stored in our garage shortly after we moved. We did sort of prepare beforehand by buying CDs pretty early when they started becoming popular.
So no, we no longer have vinyl. And to be honest, I don't really have much interest in vinyl. Our family doesn't have a record player anymore, and if anything, I would collect vinyl just to say I have it, but not for actually listening to music. I still prefer CDs by a long shot.
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TheGrimAngel
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
I just realized the Bioshock 2 Collectors Edition came with its sound track on a vinyl record. So I guess this means I do own some vinyl stuff
However I have no way of ever playing it...
However I have no way of ever playing it...
- Hobie-wan
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
Yes, LDs were odd in that respect that they're actually analog. But since it is just light reflecting to read the information they won't degrade from playing them. If they aren't stored properly, heat, moisture and such can cause disc rot though.sonic2041 wrote:Weren't things stored as analog on laser disc. But I guess that would still degrade.
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- kiteJargon
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
Definitely caught the vinyl bug a few years ago. I can safely say that I haven't bought a CD in probably 4 or 5 years.
It's like a lot of you have already said, the fact of purposefully throwing a vinyl and just sitting there and listening to it brings a lot of enjoyment. CDs just don't come anywhere close to it for me, especially through some decent headphones. The clarity and space between individual instruments just gives vinyl a much fuller sound.
For me I don't find a huge difference between a decent quality MP3 or MP4/M4A and CDs. They both just feel restrained from compression.
That being said some printings on vinyl just aren't very good and end up sounding like the CD. I have probably between 200 and 300 records and there are only a handful of them that sound like ass. The immediate one that comes to mind is Mars Volta's (RIP) most recent album Noctourniquet. It sounds like they just put on the CD and recorded straight from there...
It's tough to find decent stores though. I picked up most of mine from a store that would have a huge selection of unsorted vinyl which you could pick up for $1 or $2 a piece. They would just throw out like 900 albums and you could find some good stuff if you dug around for a while. Got some Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, and Pink Floyd that way. Every week or so they would put out even more so I would just go back and sift through every once in a while. The hunt was hella fun.
It's like a lot of you have already said, the fact of purposefully throwing a vinyl and just sitting there and listening to it brings a lot of enjoyment. CDs just don't come anywhere close to it for me, especially through some decent headphones. The clarity and space between individual instruments just gives vinyl a much fuller sound.
For me I don't find a huge difference between a decent quality MP3 or MP4/M4A and CDs. They both just feel restrained from compression.
That being said some printings on vinyl just aren't very good and end up sounding like the CD. I have probably between 200 and 300 records and there are only a handful of them that sound like ass. The immediate one that comes to mind is Mars Volta's (RIP) most recent album Noctourniquet. It sounds like they just put on the CD and recorded straight from there...
It's tough to find decent stores though. I picked up most of mine from a store that would have a huge selection of unsorted vinyl which you could pick up for $1 or $2 a piece. They would just throw out like 900 albums and you could find some good stuff if you dug around for a while. Got some Beatles, Jimi Hendrix, and Pink Floyd that way. Every week or so they would put out even more so I would just go back and sift through every once in a while. The hunt was hella fun.
Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
Since others are posting their history with vinyls, I guess I will too.
Any one ever have any luck finding vinyls in thrift stores? Every time I look at them, they look like grandpa passed away and the family donated his vinyls to Goodwill. So, a bunch of shit from the 50's. And most of the time, they smell like they've been in the basement for decades. The one time I found something wroth getting was a Doors album, but it was just the jacket.
Another thing, do all you guys properly maintain your collection? We all know to store the records standing up. But what do you guys do to clean them? The guy at the record shop I went to (mentioned on page 2) had this thing. When I asked him about it, he said it was very good and cleaned deep in the grooves. When I read some reviews about it on Amazon, some people said it actually scratched their records. One guy said he tested it on brand new records, and it fucked them up. And every cleaner on eBay seemed to have similar problems.
I just have an old vinyl cleaner that I stole from my mom (along with some of her albums
) that I use. It's just a roll of velvet or velour or whatever material vinyl cleaners traditionally are. I'll put a record on the platter and spin it up (I can spin the platter without having to move the arm) and hold the roll on it to collect all the dust and whatnot before playing. But I have some older vinyls that could probably use a deep cleaning. I've read that you can give them a deep cleaning with common household items (dish soap, microfiber towels, etc) but I haven't tried it yet. What do you guys do?
I can't let the "I don't wanna use it so it'll last longer" bug get me. You can say the same thing about video games, you know. All the buttons in all your controllers will eventually wear out and stop working if you use them enough. All the SRAM in all your carts only have a certain amount of times they can read/write until they can't anymore. I guess we're lucky enough to have new controllers for retro consoles manufactured (although 99% of them are garbage), and one could replace the SRAM in a cart if one has the know-how. But my point is, I'm not have this stuff sit on a shelf because I'm afraid of wearing it out. Then what's the point of owning it?
And lastly, while CDs wont degrade from each playing like vinyls, they shouldn't be considered to last forever. They'll eventually die whether you play them or not. Disc rot is a bitch. Rot with any prefix (eg: bit rot) sucks. To my knowledge, there's no form of storage that's absolutely permanent. But yeah, I'd rather listen to music on vinyl with some static or clicks and pops then not be able to listen to it at all (or with missing parts, lots of skipping, unreadable tracks, etc) because of disc rot.
Another thing, do all you guys properly maintain your collection? We all know to store the records standing up. But what do you guys do to clean them? The guy at the record shop I went to (mentioned on page 2) had this thing. When I asked him about it, he said it was very good and cleaned deep in the grooves. When I read some reviews about it on Amazon, some people said it actually scratched their records. One guy said he tested it on brand new records, and it fucked them up. And every cleaner on eBay seemed to have similar problems.
I just have an old vinyl cleaner that I stole from my mom (along with some of her albums
Hmm, I assumed vinyls would always have a different master just due to the fact that they're not CDs. How lazy could you be? If I went out of my way to buy an album on vinyl because it's CD version was compressed garbage, I would be extremely disappointed to find out it was the from the same source as the CD. To the point that I'd probably send a handwritten letter (well, maybe type it out and hand sign it since my handwritten is horrible) Certified Mail to the record label.dsheinem wrote:Point taken about problems with CDs, but I also know of recent vinyl that uses the same compressed source or is victim to the "loudness war". It's always a crapshoot in any medium anymore
Ah, well, I wasn't trying to engage in a serious debate. That was more of an off-the-wall remark. I like CDs a lot, don't get me wrong. Vinyls are just fun. It's a damn shame that they degrade, which is why I'll only play my vinyls when I wanna relax and really listen to music. But if you take proper care of everything, they'll at least last a long time.dsheinem wrote:I think the emulation analogy falls apart in many ways when discussing CD, though you might be on to something if comparing vinyl to MP3...
I can't let the "I don't wanna use it so it'll last longer" bug get me. You can say the same thing about video games, you know. All the buttons in all your controllers will eventually wear out and stop working if you use them enough. All the SRAM in all your carts only have a certain amount of times they can read/write until they can't anymore. I guess we're lucky enough to have new controllers for retro consoles manufactured (although 99% of them are garbage), and one could replace the SRAM in a cart if one has the know-how. But my point is, I'm not have this stuff sit on a shelf because I'm afraid of wearing it out. Then what's the point of owning it?
And lastly, while CDs wont degrade from each playing like vinyls, they shouldn't be considered to last forever. They'll eventually die whether you play them or not. Disc rot is a bitch. Rot with any prefix (eg: bit rot) sucks. To my knowledge, there's no form of storage that's absolutely permanent. But yeah, I'd rather listen to music on vinyl with some static or clicks and pops then not be able to listen to it at all (or with missing parts, lots of skipping, unreadable tracks, etc) because of disc rot.
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MulishaSoldier929
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
All I want is a Vinyl Copy of Master of Puppets.BoneSnapDeez wrote:Metal on vinyl is usually limited edition and expensive as hell. Plus, many albums are long and need two LP records.
And maybe Seasons in the Abyss.
Also Ride the Lightening.
So some Slayer in a Metallica Bread sandwich.[/quote]
If you don't want to stress your wallet, pick up new copies of Metallica vinyl off their website.
http://www.metallica.com/product-categories/vinyl.asp
You really will have a hard time finding a brand new copy for any cheaper. I know.
Beer it go good with pizza
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Forlorn Drifter
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Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
I just like picture discs for odd reasons. I've heard they don't sound as good, but I've never had that problem. I also like the ones that glow in the dark/have liquids in them. So cool.AppleQueso wrote:I've never cared for picture discs.Forlorn Drifter wrote: Bone, I can agree, but then again, I'm happy to pay $20 or so for a special edition picture disc. Also, it looks sexy as hell on my wall.
$20-30 seems to be the typical price for a metal album, and that adds up really fast. That's if you're lucky and some label still has it in print. Even then you've got to hope that the current pressing is even worth a damn. If I get into this, I'd want to really go all the way with it and built up a healthy collection, not just one or two albums, so yeah...
Anything OOP with any sort of cult status you can expect to seriously be dishing out dough for.
I have a decent starter collection thanks to my parents, so there's that.
PSN: Green-Whiskeyninjainspandex wrote:Maybe I'm just a pervert
Owned Consoles: GameCube, N64, PS3, PS4, GBASP
Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
And to bring this full circle, here's my small (but growing) collection of retro video game music on vinyl:

As far as I've been able to find, Haruomi Hosono's Video Game Music was the first game soundtrack ever released.
Some of my regular vinyl disappeared, but most of what I have aside from the above is 80s synthpop and punk.
What's a recommended reasonably priced turntable these days?

As far as I've been able to find, Haruomi Hosono's Video Game Music was the first game soundtrack ever released.
Some of my regular vinyl disappeared, but most of what I have aside from the above is 80s synthpop and punk.
What's a recommended reasonably priced turntable these days?
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AppleQueso
Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
I'd like to know this myself. As weary as I am about getting into it, I'm still interested in case I ever do.driph wrote: What's a recommended reasonably priced turntable these days?
Re: Anyone Collect or Still Listen to Vinyl?
AppleQueso wrote:I'd like to know this myself. As weary as I am about getting into it, I'm still interested in case I ever do.driph wrote: What's a recommended reasonably priced turntable these days?
$70-80 used with a new needle.
But I'm a Technics and Numark lover. Everybody asks the same thing when I play an lp, "this sound is coming from a record?".
And buy a microfiber cloth and clean your records after each play.
