buried wrote: » Don't forget to show us yer stash if you got em lads. I love looking at collections
[Deleted User] wrote: » It's a pity for a lot of artists who would have had a nice little revenue stream that's now gone. But I do dislike people talking about analogue sound on records since pretty much everything is mastered digitally and then transferred. It doesn't improve the music.
buried wrote: » Depends on who is doing the mastering though, engineers like Matt Colton will master a record to such a high degree you can literally tell the difference straight away between a low level MP3 or stream and a proper vinyl record. A lot of the records I buy the independent record shop gives you a free Mp3 copy to go with the physical record and I can always tell the difference. Especially if the likes of Colton or Rashad Becker has done the actual mastering.
buried wrote: » Depends on who is doing the mastering though, engineers like Matt Colton will master a record to such a high degree you can literally tell the difference straight away between a low level MP3 or stream and a proper vinyl record.
kneemos wrote: » Cassettes were shoite even in the day.
Deleted User wrote: » It's a pity for a lot of artists who would have had a nice little revenue stream that's now gone. But I do dislike people talking about analogue sound on records since pretty much everything is mastered digitally and then transferred. It doesn't improve the music.
murpho999 wrote: » So it's not worth €7000 then.
Kintarō Hattori wrote: » I love listening to music but with my meager CD collection and now DVD's the missus insisted I put them in the attic. It's fair enough I suppose, we don't live in a mansion and the space they took can be better used until we move somewhere bigger. I've no intention of offloading them though- they'll have their day again sometime in the future.
DS86DS wrote: » I would never ever sell away a collection like that. You're looking at €7000+ worth of music and you'd be lucky to get €1500 selling them to a second hand record store
Mint Sauce wrote: » About 300-400 CDs, and about half that amount in Cassettes. Not getting rid any time soon, despite them collecting dust.
DS86DS wrote: » Messiah FTW
sugarman wrote: » I don't get the attachment to physical media. I ****ed a few hundred CDs and DVDs into the local charity shop and never looked back. As I did with cassettes and VHS before that.
Candlemass wrote: » Im a big collector of Vinyl, there are many reasons i went back to physical format, but one of the main reasons was i had hard drives with thousands of albums which id never listen to half of them and id never listen to a full album constantly skipping to the next song/album. I missed the feeling i had when i was in my teens staring for hours at the lyrics and artwork on the tape/cd inlay that was all gone when digital came about. So now with Vinyl i always listen to albums through and experience it like i did as a kid. The only downfall is storage and now that vinyl is popular again the prices have shot up. But for now its Vinyl at home, CDs for the car and Digital in work.
andekwarhola wrote: » I still have a sizeable vinyl and CD collection packed away that I can't bring myself to get rid of but for all the lazy nostalgia I have about it, I wouldn't go back to it over the portability and convenience of digital music.
DS86DS wrote: » I know if I was the same age as my Uncle... I'd have a wonderful collection of music in its physical form.