Chaplin
Better off silent
There you go.All joking aside, throwing on an old punk vinyl and hearing the cracking to the raw sound still gives me chills!
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There you go.All joking aside, throwing on an old punk vinyl and hearing the cracking to the raw sound still gives me chills!
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All good points.
I work in the classical music world, so I hadn't thought of the distinction between "older" and newer popular music. But there's definitely something to that. A half century ago, when there was a greater expectation that someone would sit down and really listen to an album, it made more sense to try to get the sound quality as good as possible. Something released now is going to be heard through a streaming service 99% of the time, so it's more about getting something deliverable out quickly. If you stick with stuff that's legitimately from the vinyl era, there's a good chance it's going to be better sounding.
However ... there's no advantage to a Rolling Stones vinyl over the same album on CD. For marketing reasons, they might end up getting mastered slightly differently, and a listener could prefer the sound of one over the other. But the same master on CD will sound as good or better than on vinyl, plus will be more durable, in most cases.
There you g :click: There you g :click: There you g :click: There you g...
This is it to an extent. It's a listening experience and not just passively hearing music like when you're in your car. You have the ritual of it.One other thing I forgot to mention in my earlier post was a theory about the younger generations getting into vinyl.
The youths buying records now have likely grown up with some combo of downloads/streams listening in some version of earbud headphones and/or in their cars. Sitting down and listening to a 2-channel playback of something in quality speakers or headphones is an entirely different experience than hearing the top 10 streams through bluetooth earbuds on the treadmill. An extended moment of "me" time without all the normal distractions might hold some appeal to those who rarely experience it in their daily lives. Add a couple friends into the mix and they might just have their first communal event on their own terms. Just a thought.
The youths buying records now have likely grown up with some combo of downloads/streams listening in some version of earbud headphones and/or in their cars. Sitting down and listening to a 2-channel playback of something in quality speakers or headphones is an entirely different experience than hearing the top 10 streams through bluetooth earbuds on the treadmill. An extended moment of "me" time without all the normal distractions might hold some appeal to those who rarely experience it in their daily lives. Add a couple friends into the mix and they might just have their first communal event on their own terms. Just a thought.
And for sound quality, that depends. If it's a AAA title then vinyl is going to sound better. If there's a D in any of those 3 letters then you've lost the vinyl advantage. Bands like My Bloody Valentine get a tip of the cap for always doing AAA releases.
There's still a tactile difference with having to move the arm, flip the record, and junk over a CD. It's like a physical book vs kindle. I like having the tactile feel.Right, but these same youths could get the same experience with CDs. They just choose not to.
Bluetooth sucks. I have most of my albums encoded to FLAC on my phone, and the quality is noticeably better with CarPlay (WiFi based) versus vanilla BlueTooth. I absolutely believe this is a factor for vinyl.One other thing I forgot to mention in my earlier post was a theory about the younger generations getting into vinyl.
The youths buying records now have likely grown up with some combo of downloads/streams listening in some version of earbud headphones and/or in their cars. Sitting down and listening to a 2-channel playback of something in quality speakers or headphones is an entirely different experience than hearing the top 10 streams through bluetooth earbuds on the treadmill. An extended moment of "me" time without all the normal distractions might hold some appeal to those who rarely experience it in their daily lives. Add a couple friends into the mix and they might just have their first communal event on their own terms. Just a thought.