Universal Monster Army

Chitter Chatter => General Discussion => Music => Topic started by: Hepcat on February 09, 2012, 04:21:21 PM

Poll
Question: Pick your three favourite sources for music.
Option 1: Vinyl Records
Option 2: Cassette Tapes
Option 3: 8-Track Cartridges
Option 4: CDs
Option 5: SACDs
Option 6: MP3s and Other Digital Downloads.
Option 7: The Radio
Option 8: Live Streaming
Title: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on February 09, 2012, 04:21:21 PM
Are you still addicted to vinyl?  Or are you strictly digital now? How do you prefer your music delivered these days?

???
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: MDG on February 09, 2012, 04:34:16 PM
You have to add Streaming--I've been using Spotify about 6-7 hours a day at work. Before that, it was Live 365. Before that, Spinner.

At home, I use Pandora through my Roku box.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: zombiehorror on February 09, 2012, 04:51:52 PM
I do cd's but more recently have most of them converted to MP3 (stored on an external drive), I keep 8Gb of them on my little cheap MP3 player which I plug into my home stereo and put on shuffle and let play all day long!
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on February 09, 2012, 05:00:40 PM
Quote from: MDG on February 09, 2012, 04:34:16 PM
You have to add Streaming--

Done.

;)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: marsattacks666 on February 09, 2012, 07:04:15 PM
As a record collector, I'm addicted. But, cds and MP3 I use the most.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: seed_murda on February 09, 2012, 09:00:42 PM
I still love to get vinyl, always alot of extras with vinyl. I buy cd's and save them to my hard drive in case the cd gets destroyed. I guess I am a sucker for having the actual artwork, lyrics etc...
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: missdead13 on February 09, 2012, 09:16:45 PM
i not only am addicted to vinyl, its the sole source of my music delivery when im at home. period.
i only use cd's in the car.

i bought one of those fancy turntables to convert all my records to digital.. gave up after 1 record.. forget it!! lol
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Scary Terry on February 09, 2012, 10:20:37 PM
Just bought an ION Quick Play turntable for transferring vinyl to MP3 -- on sale for $25.00 (half price) at Bed, Bath & Beyond.  Simple to use -- not a high end audiophile item -- but for the price?  Can't beat it.

Still plenty of vinyl (including 78s!) and CDs here -- but I do stream the Motorbilly show at Live 365, use Pandora sometimes -- but never quite figured out Spotify.  My wife has Sirius XM radio in her car -- and now I can listen on-line -- so Little Steven's Underground Garage has become a fave....

I buy a lot of CDs directly from the indie label rockabilly, surf guitar and roots country bands I go see live.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: frankenstein73 on February 09, 2012, 11:30:01 PM
Vinyl is the preferred method to ease my mind and forget all my troubles. nothing in my opinion is as good as analog sound. and the days of listening to a whole album, side A and B seem to be over, how many songs would you have missed ,or didnt have their chance to grow on you if it werent for vinyl and not being able to skip songs? I do listen to cds in the car and my mp3 player and newer music (unless i like it and can find it released on vinyl) at work but nothing compares records. I have WELL over 500 records, from slim whitman to LED Zepplin, miles davis to the ACCUSED. I love them all and will keep listening to them till my last breath.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Wich2 on February 10, 2012, 11:32:01 AM
I've got everything from shellac 78's to Harddrive files -

- and The Medium ain't the Message - the Music (or Drama, or Comedy, or Speaking, or...) is!

-Craig
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: zombiehorror on February 10, 2012, 11:43:59 AM
vinyl or cd which sounds better??? (http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=g5dCMz4gKLI#)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: scott_of_smeg on February 10, 2012, 12:17:08 PM
you should differentiate SIRIUS XM and radio. i only listen to SIRIUS XM in the car and it was so worth the subscription.  no commercials and uncensored! it is lame but one of my favorite stations is a 90's grunge station. i hate the majority of the songs and yet i know all the words. i am a gluten for punishment. can't beat NPR either.

that being said, vinyl is only form played in the house.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on February 10, 2012, 12:48:58 PM
Quote from: scott_of_smeg on February 10, 2012, 12:17:08 PM
you should differentiate SIRIUS XM and radio. i only listen to SIRIUS XM in the car and it was so worth the subscription.

:o

Actually for simplicity's sake I'm going to continue to define anything that's played through a traditional radio receiver as radio.

;)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Zombiology on February 10, 2012, 02:07:50 PM
Mainly CDs here because of the convenience but I still have my vinyl collection.  Just don't have a record player at the moment.  Agree that vinyl still sounds better but I also love the feel of opening a gatefold and reading the liner notes as well as the lyrics.  Plus, it seems the artwork was not only larger but better and more complex.  The cd artform never has really grabbed me.

BTW, when microwaves came out, we used to call it "nuking" the food.  Lately, it has become "digitizing" it.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Flower on February 11, 2012, 10:57:44 AM
My three are vinyl (we have a great turntable but I still want my own in violet) .. CDs .. and I love to listen to the radio, especially Little Steven's Underground Garage.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: jimm on February 11, 2012, 11:03:29 AM
Until I fix or get a new turntable, streaming, radio, and a few cds is how I roll.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: MrZero on February 11, 2012, 05:45:55 PM
I love vinyl.  Most of the bands that I like were putting out albums when vinyl was still the main thing, so I can get most of that on vinyl.  Of the new bands that I like, most of THEM put out their records on vinyl too.  I do have a good number of CDs and I listen to them in the car, but when I'm at home usually vinyl.  I don't have an mp3 player except on my computer and I only listen to songs on my computer when someone asks me to check out a band.  Other than that, it's all vinyl or CD.

I understand that computer files (mp3 or whatever) are going to take over...if they haven't already.  But I'll still listen to vinyl for as long as I can.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on February 14, 2012, 11:57:01 AM
Quote from: frankenstein73 on February 09, 2012, 11:30:01 PM
Vinyl is the preferred method to ease my mind and forget all my troubles. nothing in my opinion is as good as analog sound ... nothing compares to records. I have WELL over 500 records, from slim whitman to LED Zepplin, miles davis to the ACCUSED. I love them all and will keep listening to them till my last breath.

I'm still a vinyl purist myself. Here I am looking over my 500 or so LPs:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/Arecord.jpg)

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/Arecord3.jpg)

The speaker you see in the second picture is one of my two Monitor Audio Silver RS8 speakers:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AMonitorAudioSilverRS8.jpg)

I was helping a buddy audition some speakers four years ago and I was knocked out by the lush, rich, lustrous sound they delivered, especially in comparison to more expensive speakers!

I play my records on a Thorens TD240 turntable:

(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/g434/Balticprince/Thorens_TD240(1).jpg)

It's equipped with an Ortofon 2M Black cartridge featuring a cutting edge Shibata stylus:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AOrtofon2MBlackItemDisplayImage-1.jpg)

My next project is to find a Garrard C6 headshell and to then get a custom base built for a new old stock Garrard GT55 turntable from the 1970's:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AGarrard.jpg)

I plan to get the base built from alternating layers of baltic birch which has gained renown for being acoustically dead. I envision a surface veneer of dark walnut to resemble the appearance of the vintage GT55 bases which were actually made at the time from cheap particle board covered with a vinyl veneer resembling woodgrain:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AGarrardGT-552.jpg)

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AGarrardGT-553.jpg)

The GT55 will then serve to anchor a second sound system in my bedroom. The turntable I'm currently eyeing for my main system is the Thorens TD350:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/AThorens.jpg)

Unfortunately it's not exactly an inexpensive turntable. Then of course I'd like to spring for this handsome Nitty Gritty Mini Pro record cleaning machine:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/Anitty.jpg)

I'm so into turntables that I wrote up this piece a couple of years ago on choosing and operating a turntable:

1. You can throw thousands$ on a more expensive amplifier or CD player and not be able to discern the difference in a blind listening test, but spending more on a turntable/cartridge combo after a bit of research/thought will yield big time dividends. This also means that you're not going to get decent reproduction if you cheap out when buying your turntable though.

2. Having said that, decent reasonably priced turntables are made these days by companies such as Pro-Ject, Music Hall, Thorens and Dual. These Pro-Ject Debut III turntables are a particularly popular choice for people who want a decent turntable without spending too much money:

(http://i1101.photobucket.com/albums/g434/Balticprince/debutcolors.jpg)

This website provides a very decent overview on turntable pricing:

Needle Doctor (http://"http://www.needledoctor.com/Online-Store/Turntables")

3. If, however, you find your budget stretched, I'd suggest you get a completely refurbished Dual turntable from this fellow:

Fix My Dual (http://"http://www.fixmydual.com/")

They just don't build turntables of the quality of the old Duals anymore unless you're willing to spend $3500 or more and you can get a completely refurbished old Dual for less than $300. I mean most of the turntables you see these days have bases made from bakelite or some other cheap polymer. Among the old Duals, I like the belt-drive 601 and 1249 models myself but others may disagree.

Another plus associated with vintage Dual, Garrard, Thorens, etc. turntables is that they included both a speed selector dial and an auto return feature, something you don't find in the Rega, Pro-Ject or Music Hall turntables these days. Believe it or not, but they now want you to lift the platter and move the belt yourself to change speeds! And don't fall asleep in your armchair while listening. Your needle will still be tracking in the out grooves of your record when you wake several hours later if you have a Rega, Pro-Ject or Music Hall turntable. Dual turntables and the Thorens TD-240 turntable are among the very few turntables with these very practical features these days.

4. I'd suggest the following to anyone looking for a new turntable:

A) Make sure it's a belt-drive model. While the phrase "direct drive" sounds great, keep in mind that the last thing you'd want to do is couple a motor directly to the platter. The way vinyl technology works is that the grooves of the record make the stylus vibrate. These vibrations are converted into electrical energy by the cartridge. But have you ever encountered a motor that does not itself vibrate? The last thing you want is for the stylus to be picking up your turntable motor's vibrations i.e. rumble.

Since the devil is in the details though, the execution of a concept is typically every bit as important as the design. As a result, some very good direct drive turntables were marketed in the 1970's, including the Dual 721 ("Silence is golden.") and some Technics models.

B) A suspended sub-chassis. This helps to isolate your platter from ambient vibrations coming from your speakers. If your platter isn't properly isolated, you'll get feedback in the form of a loud hum. Feedback will drive you nuts, believe me.

That's why I'm leery of Rega turntables. They don't incorporate a suspended sub-chassis and I've heard of users plagued with feedback problems.

C) Weight, the heavier the better. The heavier the platter, the more will its own inertia help it to maintain an even speed in the face of minuscule variations in motor speed thus reducing "wow" and "flutter". The more solid and heavier the plinth, the "deader" and less susceptible will be your turntable to picking up ancillary vibrations.

5. A good cartridge is about as important as the turntable itself. I like the Ortofon 2M series of cartridges which may be the best moving magnet cartridges produced today. I have an Ortofon 2M Black but that's a $670 model. The Red, Blue and Bronze models are available for $100, $200 and $390 respectively.
There are those who extoll the merits of generally more expensive moving coil cartridges but those usually require replacing the whole cartridge when the stylus wears out! As a result, I admit I haven't even given the moving coils a test listen.

Once again, the Needle Doctor website provides a good overview of cartridge pricing.

6. I'd suggest you order your cartridge from your friendly local stereo shop instead of getting it online though. Your neighbourhood stereo shop should not only be able to match online prices but as part of the service they supply the shop should precisely set up your turntable with your new cartridge for ideal tracking. I can't overstress the importance of setting up your turntable with precision. They're not plug and play gadgets like CD players but a good turntable/cartridge combo provides far richer sound reproduction than any digital source.

Moreover, if you don't support your local stereo shop today, it might not be around when you actually need it for something like servicing your equipment tomorrow.

7. If your amplifier does not have a dedicated phono input, you will also need a phono linestage also known as a phono preamplifier. A decent one will cost at least $139. Don't cheap out and buy one of the carded $29 ones that a record store might offer to a newbie. A phono linestage is not just a connection. One of its prime functions is to add back the bass that has been lost as a result of being compressed into a record's narrow grooves! Pro-Ject, Graham Slee, Thorens, Creek, many audio component manufacturers make very good ones.

8. Don't put your turntable on top of one of your speakers! Remember what I said about not wanting your stylus to pick up ancillary vibrations? Rumble, feedback, etc? Speakers of course vibrate. Placing your turntable on a solid dresser full of clothing or a bookcase loaded with books and records would probably prevent your turntable from picking up ambient vibrations being transferred up from the floor. You might want to check that the surface on which you put the turntable is level so that you get even tracking. A level can be picked up for $1.50 at the hardware store.

Another thing I'd suggest is putting hardwood carving boards/butcher blocks under both your new turntable and your speakers. This also helps prevent ambient vibrations from your speakers from being transferred to your turntable by means of the floor and muddying the sound you get.

9. Always remove the dust cover completely to play a record. The reason is that the dust cover itself picks up sound vibrations and then carries these back down to the platter on which your record is revolving - which is something you definitely do not want. You'll hear the improvement immediately. Taking off the dust cover makes a very obvious difference to the sound you get from your records.

10. Clean/wash your records. Good commercial solutions and systems are available including the Nitty Gritty record cleaning machines. All the money you've spent on a better turntable will be wasted if your records have a dirty film covering them from years of smoking or just being left lying around so that dust can settle upon them.

11. I'd be reluctant to pay the premium price of newly issued vinyl these days. Almost everything recorded since the early nineties has been recorded digitally anyway so vinyl pressings of these recordings theoretically shouldn't provide the additional magic or warmth for which analog recordings are famous. Reissues of older recordings on 180 gram vinyl are most often very, very good, however.

8)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Toy Ranch on February 14, 2012, 12:35:11 PM
I have a bunch of vinyl still, but only listen to digital, and the occasional CD.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Zardoz on February 14, 2012, 01:38:18 PM
I'm Still addicted to vinyl after buying well over 2000 of them it's hard not to be !!
but when cassette's hit the market I bought about 300 before Cd"s came in.
now I have a little over 1000 Cd's and many Mp3's and FLAC recordings.
But nothing beats the sound of an album at least not yet !!


Nice collection by the way !!!
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Flower on February 15, 2012, 09:12:29 AM
I love going to used music stores .. picking up great deals on CDs in the dollar bin and hidden gems on vinyl
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: BaronLatos35 on February 15, 2012, 09:21:09 PM
I still have my records and I love them. However, I mostly listen to my music digitally today. I have 500+ songs on my iPhone ready to go at all times in my car, gym etc. 2500 on my Mac.

But vinyl still has that warm magic that is hard to beat. Sometimes I still like to put on a record.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Unknown Primate on February 16, 2012, 04:42:18 PM
I'm not addicted to them, but I still have all my vinyl.  I have a junky turntable and until I talk (beg) my wife into getting something better, I won't play them on it.  Mostly listen to cd's I've burned off downloads.  Sirius Radio in the car.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Street Worm on February 21, 2012, 07:56:17 PM
Still have all my albums (vinyl) or what's left after moving cross country a few times...

I held out a long time but CDs are (now) fine with me &

My truck still has a (built in) cassette player (along w/CD) which is probably why I haven't gotten rid of it yet-
not a big fan, but I have a few boxes full of cassettes bought in the mid to late '80s.

Don't think 'digital' is for me-
I like my music like I like my books-
Up on the shelf in chronological order~  ;)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: frankenstein73 on February 26, 2012, 07:02:34 AM
been listening to vinyl all night, nothing compares.....
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: scorpio on February 26, 2012, 07:23:59 AM
i really like them speakers there great, as for vinyl i was collecting it before cds were ever thought of,
and just looking at the cover of the lps etc, brings back loads of memories and reminds you your getting old....
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on March 14, 2012, 09:06:06 AM
Quote from: BaronLatos35 on February 15, 2012, 09:21:09 PMBut vinyl still has that warm magic that is hard to beat. Sometimes I still like to put on a record.

CDs are fine when all I want is background music. But vinyl is my choice whenever I want to seriously listen to music.

C:)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Prof. Hemispheres on March 20, 2012, 02:47:10 PM
I have between 250 to 350 vinyl LP's of mostly hard rock from the 1970's - 1980's. I'll never give up the old albums. But I also do CD's. If the music is being recorded digitally, it only makes sense to buy the CD. Some bands are going back to analog recording nowadays....maybe if any of that comes out and interests me, I'll buy it on vinyl, but I cannot see buying a digital recording pressed to vinyl.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Zachareed on March 20, 2012, 03:00:33 PM
I was born in the 90's, so vinyl was falling out of favor as the main thing. And I grew up on cassettes and cds haha. Now though, I really love vinyl and I buy new and old bands' projects on vinyl and cd usually. I like vinyl because the album art and sleeve art and all that. The visual element seems to take on a bigger role. And I like that.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Monster Bob on March 20, 2012, 04:27:10 PM


I listen to ancient music, so yes, vinyl is where it's at for me most of the time, or CDs of the same, if I don't have it on vinyl. 45s, albums, and 78s.

A few  years ago, I was on vacation in Key West and a business next door to our hotel lost it's lease or something, and they dumped everything in the building out on the curb as garbage. In amongst all the boxes and old computers were two unused "DJ" turntables, yep...brand spankin' new. I had to buy a cartridge/needle is all. When I got home I researched them, and found out they retailed for like $650 each. Now that was a good vacation!
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on March 21, 2012, 08:34:54 AM
Quote from: Prof. Hemispheres on March 20, 2012, 02:47:10 PMSome bands are going back to analog recording nowadays....maybe if any of that comes out and interests me, I'll buy it on vinyl, but I cannot see buying a digital recording pressed to vinyl.

You're right. A digital recording pressed on vinyl will have all the disadvantages of both digital and vinyl without the advantages of an analog recording, that being a fuller, richer, warmer sound.

:(
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on March 21, 2012, 08:42:55 AM
Quote from: Monster Bob on March 20, 2012, 04:27:10 PM

In amongst all the boxes and old computers were two unused "DJ" turntables, yep...brand spankin' new. I had to buy a cartridge/needle is all. When I got home I researched them, and found out they retailed for like $650 each.

What model were they?

???
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Monster Bob on March 21, 2012, 08:51:14 AM

gemini XL-500 II.  Hopefully I'll never have to buy another turntable in my lifetime.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Rich on March 28, 2012, 12:29:28 PM
Since I own an iPhone now I stream music through the Youtube ap a lot. However, I own so many CDs. I think the CD is the Vynal of the 90s generation. There are some of us who will ALWAYS listen to CDs, the same way so many people STILL listen to vynals. CDs defined an era, as did vynals. We keep that era alive by listening and enjoying our CDs. As a matter of fact, I need a new discman.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: general gruesome on May 25, 2012, 02:00:15 PM
I chose Vinyl, 8-track, and cassettes, but I think vinyl is the greatest
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Scatter on May 25, 2012, 03:10:55 PM
Quote from: Monster Bob on March 20, 2012, 04:27:10 PM

I listen to ancient music, so yes, vinyl is where it's at for me most of the time, or CDs of the same, if I don't have it on vinyl. 45s, albums, and 78s.

A few  years ago, I was on vacation in Key West and a business next door to our hotel lost it's lease or something, and they dumped everything in the building out on the curb as garbage. In amongst all the boxes and old computers were two unused "DJ" turntables, yep...brand spankin' new. I had to buy a cartridge/needle is all. When I got home I researched them, and found out they retailed for like $650 each. Now that was a good vacation!

I bet Elvis sounds FANTASTIC on those turntables!! Of course, he sounds fantastic anyway, but you get the point.  ;)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Terry on May 25, 2012, 09:26:38 PM
I have Loved Vinyl since 1964,I have over 1000 45's and 864 Lp's...But I also have Many CD's, All of my music is on my computer in itunes. >:D >:D >:D
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on May 25, 2012, 11:22:25 PM
But if you have the records, how can you bear to listen to the lossy result of compressing them into iTunes? Isn't your turntable any good?

???
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: missdead13 on June 24, 2012, 01:19:54 PM
Quote from: Monster Bob on March 21, 2012, 08:51:14 AM
gemini XL-500 II.  Hopefully I'll never have to buy another turntable in my lifetime.


I have one of these too, but yet I still buy turntables. . Its a sickness. seriously.
I see a record player, and I like " have to " buy it. Like a compulsion . . sigh...
anyways.. you rock for having one of these !!!! :laugh:
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on June 24, 2012, 01:46:26 PM
Well then please buy one of these Thorens TD350 turntables for me. That way you won't have to worry your little head about finding room for it.

;)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Monster Bob on June 28, 2012, 12:39:56 PM

Thank you, missdead. I am very happy with it. I love the speed control, on/off switch, etc.

I also have one of those Crosley 1940s art deco-ish radio/turntable combos out in the garage. It looks surprisingly authentic for one of these things (it looks like it is made of bakelite),  a self-contained unit to play 78s, 45s, etc. and it sounds pretty good for its small size. I think it cost like $125 or something, new at the time. I've been using it several years.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on November 03, 2020, 11:20:51 PM
So how many of you other folk still addicted to vinyl?

???
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: geezer butler on November 04, 2020, 01:16:25 AM
Quote from: Hepcat on November 03, 2020, 11:20:51 PM
So how many of you other folk still addicted to vinyl?

???

I know UMA brothers Mars and Mord still collect vinyl and cds, but these days I'm strictly digital. I love physical media, i still collect comic books, dvds, and blue-rays. But that's part of the issue here. Because of that I don't have the room to set up a dope stereo system and display vinyl and cd collection. Two of my younger brothers are hipster, audiophiles and have large vinyl collections. So at least I can jam with them sometimes.  :)
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Mike...In 3-D! on November 04, 2020, 08:21:46 AM
I'll buy horror movie soundtracks or related items (like original spooky synth music) on vinyl. I have my favorite stuff on vinyl (Bouncing Souls, Misfits, Samhain, The Cramps) but pretty much anything else is CD. If for some reason it's not available on CD, I'll do digital. I don't do strictly digital because stuff isn't always available in that format, and CDs and what not do go out of print. Because of that I grab a physical copy whenever possible.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: marsattacks666 on November 04, 2020, 11:15:30 AM
As Geezer stated in his post. I sure do collect vinyl records. Only specific genres and bands. Having a massive vinyl collection does not appeal to me.  My vinyl collection is a small one. As is my compact disc collection. Only collecting rare or hard-to-find compact discs. Mostly Hard Rock, Metal, Garage Rock, Punk Rock, Dark/New Wave , Soundtracks,  Halloween and Horror related content.
Title: Re: Are you still addicted to vinyl or do you now source your music otherwise?
Post by: Hepcat on January 23, 2022, 12:47:20 PM
While I have well over a hundred CDs, I still love my vinyl records of which I have several hundred. Storage of that many can of course present a problem.

One of the reasons why I still like vinyl is my strong attachment to turntables which first developed in the late 1960's when the Dual 1219 and Garrard SL95B (which I still have in storage) were the top of the line turntables. The turntable to which I currently aspire is this splendid belt-drive suspended sub-chassis Thorens TD 1601:

(https://hosting.photobucket.com/images/g434/Balticprince/Thorens.jpg)

8)