I collect a significant amount of new vinyl and listen to it relatively frequently, but digital music is so much more convenient. That can be a detriment though, I find a lot of the value I get out of listening to vinyl is the "intentional listening" experience. I think Henry Rollins called it carbohydrate listening or something to that effect, listening to things you like that you've heard a million times and isn't exactly stimulating in the same way a new album or artist would be. Music feels a whole lot more consumable and disposable when its just on constant instant playback. Forcing yourself to flip the record and drop the needle keeps you more engaged I feel.
All that to say I mostly just like collecting colored vinyl, and supporting small bands and artists you like by buying a product significantly more profitable than millions of Spotify streams is pretty cool.
Thanks for making the Henry Rollins' carbohydrate reference. It's a great way to label these two modes of listening that we all experience.
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"I have two basic food groups of music: protein and carbohydrate.
The protein listening is new music, where it’s unfamiliar to me so I’m listening, sometimes taking notes, researching the band while the music is playing. I do quite a bit of this, usually during the week.
On the weekends, I will allow for some carbohydrate listening, which would be records I’m familiar with, that I’ve been playing for years. This music is not exactly background, but more of an environmental asset for elevation of mood."
It's exactly the same for me. Yes, vinyl is more inconvenient, expensive and may even sound "worse" unless you have an expensive audio setup.
That said, the deliberate experience of sitting in your couch, doing/thinking nothing else but the music you're listening, is for me an invaluable ritual. It's like meditation.
A '63 Alfa Romeo Giulia Sprint GT is objectively worse than the latest VW Golf GTI by every measurable metric.
The driving experience, though, is completely different. There's some "grin factor" raw-ness, some analog-ness to the former that makes the latter comparatively feel like a muted couch-on-wheels.
Not really analogous. No matter how much you tune the GTI's ECU, throttle curve, ESC, etc., you won't be able to precisely replicate the handling of the classic car, though you might get close.
By contrast, one can digitally capture the output of a turntable + phono preamp and then store it, share it, and replay it with all the crackle and warmth of the original in perfect fidelity without ever having to touch the record again.
Vinyl isn't about crackle or warmth. Good vinyl rigs are usually not warm. It's about the fact that vinyl physically cannot support a super compressed mix.
Unpopular opinion: Vinyl is not really about the sound. The sound is different, Yes, but that's not it. Vinyl is about displaying the cover, pulling the disc out of it, feeling the weight of the object as you align it on the turntable, pushing the button and watch it spin up, then delicately drop the needle at the right place. Vinyl involves a _ritualistic_ consensual experience which modern medium entirely lack. You can share your appreciation of the cover art and printed lyrics with other people in the room while the music plays. There's no distraction or suggestion coming from a computer screen. When the music stops, what happens is entirely up to you. Vinyl lets you feel the void and puts you entirely in control of the listening session.
Cassette tapes have made a similar niche comeback for a very similar reason. There's the tactility in the experience of fast forwarding, rewinding, pressing play. If you're using a walkman, you can even feel the tape turning as it plays in your hand or in your pocket. The rituals involved with using a tape are so intentional in a way that it just isn't when listening to music on a streaming service.
It also is basically the epitome of DIY ethos so popular in punk and indie music, what with creating your own mix tapes, sometimes imperfectly. The relatively low fidelity of the medium also adds to the charm. "stealing" music by taping it from the radio, another cassette, or from a cd.
It just plays heavily towards nostalgia in a way that I don't think CD will ever be able to. Though I do have fond memories of burning mixed CDs, it just doesn't have the same charm as sitting at a tape deck and carefully pressing record and stop.
I got rid of all my vinyl (much of it with some water damage) years ago, but I do sort of understand the tactile appeal, the retro-ness, and the listening intentionality. In these days of lossless digital formats, CDs are mostly just a medium to buy/transfer a bunch of bits. I can't say I really understand interest in cassettes at all. Obviously it was the only way you could copy someone's album or make a mix tape at one point but that doesn't apply today.
I certainly had cassettes as a teenager and college student and made plenty of mix/party tapes using them (and copied albums my friends owned). I guess I just look back at them as a utilitarian tool to accomplish something I had no other means to accomplish.
You don't have the large format artwork and liner notes, you have objectively inferior sound quality, you don't have random access, it's just an object that you stick in a player. So, no I don't, beyond a nostalgic I used to make mix/party tapes in this format.
I grew up DJing with vinyl, it is as much about the wicky-wicky as it is the ritual of carefully and delicately placing a needle before going off to smoke your cigar.
Though for me its more about blending and beatmatching... the feeling of a perfectly timed double-drop or blend or whatever simply isn't the same with digital. And most new DJs can't even beatmatch by ear any more!
If you go to a party and the DJ is spinning wax and he's got two tracks going perfectly in-sync... due to vinyl's inherent instabilities, that takes some serious skill. On a modern setup you just drag the pitch fader til the BPMs are the same and hit play at the start of the phrase, and the worst you have to worry about is the bass knocking your cheaply-made faders around
It kind of is because you don't have an even frequency response throughout the vinyl. The closer to the center, the less high frequency response you get. Also higher frequencies in general require the cutting needle to to move faster and can introduce unpleasant distortion into the record, so you might attenuate higher frequencies on a vinyl record that you wouldn't need to for the streaming/radio/cd mix.
> It's about the fact that vinyl physically cannot support a super compressed mix.
This is false. Vinyl's physicality limits its dynamic range. If you have too high of an amplitude the cuts in the vinyl will be deeper and depending on the track could lead to the needle literally jumping off the player creating skipping. A super compressed mix doesn't create issues, a heavily limited one does. Clipping and brickwall limiting create problems for vinyls and introduce unpleasant distortion. You can still have a very compressed track on vinyl.
If a vinyl mix ends up with more dynamic range than the CD mix, it's because it was an active choice made by the mixing/mastering engineers, not because vinyl can't handle compressed mixes. In fact due to avoiding limiting as much as possible, you'll encounter plenty of cases where there is less dynamic range due to added compression to bring out the detail in quieter sections.
Forgive my ignorance: I thought it was the other way around, and you needed some relatively high amount of compression on a vinyl master, since otherwise the grooves would swing too wildly, and the needle would have a higher chance of "skipping". Is this an incorrect understanding of mine?
Digital medium has a higher dynamic range and can be used for playback of completely uncompressed orchestral performances, but in practice it also can reliably play audio that is so compressed (maximising perceived volume) that vinyl playback of the recording would be impossible.
Pop producers went off the deep end with this trick during the loudness wars, once it became possible through CDs.
I think this is mainly dealt with by the RIAA curve which is standard across all recordings. The compression being referred to is likely the per-track compression as part of the production/mastering process.
Vinyl also has no low end to speak of. Hence the RIAA curves which define how the low end is stripped out before cutting, and "restored" during playback. If you ever get a chance, listen to some vinyl on gear that can have the RIAA curves defeated/disengaged.
Do vinyl and CDs of the exact same album have different mixes? I find this very hard to believe, or the amount of human involvement must be very low -- software automation. My point: In 2023, what record label could defend the cost of expensive audio engineers to remix an album just for vinyl. The realized, absolute profits on vinyl must be tiny at this point. And when I wrote profit, I do not mean profit margin, which will be very large on small sales revenue
I'm a professional musician who makes a good portion of my "living" selling recorded music. You use the same mix for all mediums but need to master differently for vinyl. (Mix refers to levels of individual microphones, mastering is the frequency levels of the finished mix)
I'm sure some people master different for digital outlets, but we don't. Regarding profitability,it's so much easier to sell vinyl than cds it's a challenge keeping them in stock, and pretty much every vinyl plant on earth is backlogged right now. Also the return of an lp vs. spotify is orders of magnitude higher; our Spotify income is barely quantifiable. (maybe bc we didn't specially master for it ha?)
Usually, yes. Albums have the RIAA curve applied. CDs typically do not, except for many of those produced in the mid-1980's when the studios were producing CDs as fast as they could and didn't want to spend the time to remaster a recording for the flat response of the CD.
The problem in the 1980s was they were starting with master tapes that already had the RIAA equalization whereas today the masters are digital and don't. So for a modern title the RIAA curve would be added for a tape to be sent to the lathe, and probably would be done when the signal is analog.
> Amazing recording! The sonic mastering on this one is outstanding. Make sure you have your stylus and needle prepared for the canon blasts in the 1812 overture! Take a look at how wide the grooves are near the end of Side 1! I had to adjust my tone-arm weight so the needle didn't get thrown off the track or skip. This is a great listen and sounds amazing.
> Do vinyl and CDs of the exact same album have different mixes?
Certainly sometimes. In fact probably always - you can't just take analogue masters and dump them to digital - you have to do at least some mixing and filtering.
As a single datapoint, Frank Zappa's Hot Rats was remixed for CD; I hated the CD remix, which I thought was too harsh (I'm not the only person who felt that way). Also, there are differences in the actual music: the intro to Gumbo Variations, for example, is a couple of bars longer in the CD remix than the original vinyl.
I've got used to the CD remix now, and I appreciate the extended into to Gumbo Variations.
[Edit] Am I the only person that found the article impossible to read, because it was jiggling around so fast?
I think typically there's only one mix, but there will be as many masters as the mediums you're targetting: one master for CD, one for Spotify, one for vinyl, etc.
What would you do differently mastering for a CD versus Spotify?
(I'm in the middle of releasing an album, and we don't have different masters for these, but I could imagine that the situation is different for more professional groups)
Spotify compresses it anyway but for digital audio you'd want to encode in 48 kHZ/24 bit whereas CD only supports 44.1 kHZ/16 bit. Anyone who can hear the difference would be an exceptional listener with an exceptional sound system though, at least assuming the masters are generated with proper dithering.
The mixes are optimized to a different set of constraints. (Or they should be, chances are much of the collectibles for modern music are just bad vinyl pressings of the mix for digital.) It's not "more careful mixes", the digital one will likely have seen just as much care or more, but the analog one can strike compromises between dynamics and minor distortion that the digital simply can't. Because all digital distortion is major distortion and avoided at all costs. That's why the mix for digital usually throws far more dynamics under the bus to achieve loudness than the mix for analog.
A CD version of the vinyl mix would sound great, but you'd be surprised how silent it is if you leave your amp at the usual setting.
> The mixes are optimized to a different set of constraints.
From what I heard, a lot of vinyls are just recorded from CD. No source, just a YouTube video a long time ago so take it with a grain of salt.
> Because all digital distortion is major distortion and avoided at all costs.
Not a signal processing expert but from what I read, all the quantization noise is pushed into the >20kHz frequencies where it can't be heard via dithering/noise shaping.
Loudness/compression is a deliberate choice and has nothing to do with noise.
What i meant with digital distortion is what happens when your levels leave the good regions: on vinyl, the resulting distortion will gently ramp in. The medium keeps representing those higher levels, just not very well. A good vinyl mix will consider allowing some of that the lesser evil over achieving the same amount of general loudness with more dynamics compression.
The clipping you'd get in the digital realm however isn't gentle or subtle at all and the levels beyond the good range simply don't exist. That's a hard no-go.
Quantization noise is an entirely different non-beast. Loudness/compression has everything to do with it. Yes, sometimes ccompression is also employed as an intentional creative element, but that's not even the tip of the ice berg.
I do agree with the suspicion that many vinyl pressings these days are just pressings of the CD mix. But this has everything to do with business and nothing with technology. It's a shame that back when the industry went through that phase of experimenting with formats beyond [email protected], they did not do a multichannel format with one stereo pair holding the loudness-optimized mix for radio, driving and the like, and another pair shifted 48dB lower to add more headroom. (or 24dB, to allow half of the additional bits of a 16 -> 24 expansion to go to where people usually expect it)
As mentioned I’m not an expert but what kind of distortions can there be in properly mastered 16 bit 44.1kHz PCM? I know there is distortion from quantisation but that’s a solved problem with dithering and noise shaping, no?
Clipping is just bad mastering, no?
I also find it hard to believe that vinyl will have less distortion as it’s analog where physical imperfections in the medium will affect the sound far more than in the case of digital mediums like CDs - with the latter it’s either a 1 or a 0; as long as wear and tear / damage doesn’t flip a 1 to a 0 or vice versa, you are good (and even if you do get a flip, ECC will normally fix it).
Vinyl also has it own set of restrictions with the frequencies it can reproduce and dynamic range since it’s all encode physically as tiny groves with bumps on the vinyl.
Yeah, clipping is bad mastering. But you'd be surprised what happens when you simply reduce levels to the point where the odd freak wave outlier does not clip. People mock the loudness wars, but the amount of effective volume you'd get after naive "just make it not clip" mastering would be too low for even the loudest loudness decriers.
Levels on vinyl don't have a clear maximum beyond which the levels are cleanly clipped: they keep going, just not as good. It's more like the red zone on an engine's rpm, you wouldn't want to operate up there for prolonged periods, but a race driverwho never ever dipped the needle in there for even the shortest time wouldn't be good at their job. A good CD mix will achieve target loudness exclusively by dynamics compression, a good vinyl mix can achieve the same with a mix of noticeably less compression and the occasional flirt with the red zone.
Personally I would file the loudness wars under bad mastering too.
Properly mastered CD audio is the near the best audio you can get as a consumer - you have 24 bit 96kHz audio but that's really overkill as the noise floor with 16 bits is already very very low even without noise shaping dither.
Vinyl as an audio storage medium I honestly don't see the appeal. Noisy, lower dynamic range than CD, low durability and longevity, ... etc.
> Loudness/compression is a deliberate choice and has nothing to do with noise.
Agree. Personally I find the amount of compression used in many of today's releases highly objectionable. I'm a big Duran Duran fan, and was really looking forward to listening to "Future Past" in 2021 after pre-ordering it. But within a minute into it I thought there was something wrong with my headphones. Turns out they compressed the hell out of it - the album is unlistenable, even in a car going down the road.
The large amount of compression is commonly known as the Loudness War:
> Well, the objective sounds quality is always _worse_ than eg CDs.
Not necessarily true. If you have a good pair of speakers, a good amplifier, but a bad DAC[1], a CD can sound worse than vinyl (whose output does not need to go through a DAC). Old CD players (like mine) have dated built-in DACs, so this is not too exceptional a situation.
The above comment holds even if the vinyl was made from a CD source, since the vinyl maker could have used a quality DAC that's better than your CD player's.
For a long time, I didn't understand why my FM radio channel (WQXR) sounded better than my CDs. Turns out my CD player's DAC was poor in comparison to what the radio station was using to play their CDs.
And if you have a shitty record player, it will sound even worse. I don't think this can count in any way, reasonable CD players are easy to obtain and in the worst case you can always pull a FLAC play through whatever high-quality DAC you have available. Vinyl on the contrary is physically constrained regarding sound quality.
Good DACs are cheap now, e.g. the Apple USB-C to 3.5mm "adapter" is actually a DAC. It sells for 9GBP on their website, and sound quality is so good that you're unlikely to be able to hear any flaws. Basically any modern DAC that was designed with quality in mind will exceed vinyl audio quality.
A fresh record on a clean needle with a good turntable will sound identical to a CD, if not slightly better, because the physical grooves will not have the same quantization as digital
Nyquist’s sampling theorem tells us that sound sampled at 44kHz will reproduce all frequencies in the range of human hearing. There is no “quantization”.
Further the act of mastering and creating the record, and playback using a needle, will inevitably affect the sound somewhat. In the scenario you describe the music is likely to sound very good, but it will never be identical to a CD.
There is too quantization, you cant get to any bitness without quantizing the raw waveform at some level.
A signal that exceeds the maximum amplitude allowed by the media will behave dramatically different as digital bits vs an analog groove. There are also very subtle transformations that occur as a byproduct of the needle physically moving around and through the groove, in addition to any properties imparted on the sound by cabling, connectivity, or the preamp's response curve.
Nyquist theorem simply says we can reproduce the original waveform with enough bandwidth. But it does not take into account other properties of the medium.
Subjectively I find the bass on vinyl to be smoother and more buttery given the same recording available digitally. Maybe its the mastering. Maybe its because the music isn't clipping. But for bass music it is definitely a bit of a je ne sais quoi, its definitely there with a good needle, preamp, pressing, and speaker.
It might also sound much worse for a number of reasons that would prevent the proper cutting of the laquer master. I have my studio next door to a vinyl mastering studio and it is truly a fascinating craft. The cutter might have to narrow the stereo image to prevent the needle from jumping out of the groove. Often this is done by mono'ing the low end. The tool he uses will gradually mono the low end on a slope from i.e 150hz and down. This can lead to less low end especially if there are phasing issues that will cancel out signal when collapsing to mono. They will also high pass from 20-30hz and low pass (can't remember how low he went), and sometimes even de-ess the entire mix!
Also if the sides of the vinyl are too long, the sound quality will suffer badly.
And if they screw up the cut, it's a lot of $$$ for each laquer master and the diamond needle for cutting doesn't last many records either.
> That said, the deliberate experience of sitting in your couch, doing/thinking nothing else but the music you're listening, is for me an invaluable ritual. It's like meditation.
This is what we did with cassettes and then CDs. I had dates where we sat on the floor and just thumbed through our CD catalogs and played music for hours. Even today, I still prefer to listen to whole albums.
Me too to all. Listening to full albums and not using infinite playlist is why, for me, Spotify is not really any different than the older tech and I don’t feel the need to jump on the vinyl train. I’m not a collector/hoarder of physical objects, I know I’d actually listen less if I had to search the shelf and drop a needle. Maybe because I developed these habits earlier in life, well before streaming or even Napster. It is interesting to see how the younger digital natives are interested in analog music now.
“Supporting the artist” is a commonly cited reason. In the part, we bought posters, shirts and concert tickets to to accomplish this.
> That said, the deliberate experience of sitting in your couch, doing/thinking nothing else but the music you're listening, is for me an invaluable ritual. It's like meditation.
Just imagine if you could do that with a CD or even an album of MP3s! But that's just not possible, it can only be done with vinyl records.
You're right, it's not vinyl that makes it possible, so I believe there's more to this than my original comment implies.
I think it's the physical aspect of the vinyl compared to streaming services. Some people do that with CDs, but I like vinyls more since they feel more "analog" to me. Also I like the warmth of their sound. Also GP has a point about the turntable engaging you more.
> Forcing yourself to flip the record and drop the needle keeps you more engaged I feel.
It's a physical process/ritual that a number of people still do and reinforce among each other. It's fine to call it what it is, and it's fine that it makes you feel more connected to the music. But it ain't the music.
A nice vinyl album with artwork shows a lot of care has gone into making it, where as an album in Spotify has been stripped of all uniqueness and identity in all but the sound itself.
A vinyl without sleeve and artwork and a carefully curated Spotify playlist sit somewhere inbetween.
"Spotify has been stripped of all uniqueness and identity in all but the sound itself."
There is at least the cover picture left, but yes, I would not recommend Spotify for mindful listening. It is designed for "engagement", I still have not found out, how to tell it to stop, after that one song I want to hear.
It insists on playing something else. Very rarely something interesting shows up, but usually I just get annoyed for it playing radio, when I wanted ONE song, nothing more.
So I love my own digital music collection and player that remains under my control.
I have a shuffle there as well, but conscious listening remains possible, even though surely the experience would be more powerful, combined with the ritual of going through the physical records, holding the artwork in my hands and putting the one record in. But for convinience, I stick to my digital collection. (I don't think all my music is on vinyl and I would need extra rooms then)
"How to get Spotify to stop playing music: Take headphones off."
And when the sound comes from the boxes? Then yes, I have to hurry back to the laptop to stop the not fitting next song (e.g. something fast, after I choose something chill). This is ridiculous.
The feature "stop after song" is avaiable in every serious music player I used (and also the one I programmed myself). But it is not in Spotify, even though it is trivial.. This is what I call "designed for engagement". I have to click more and find new things etc.
"I dont think I've ever listened to a song I didn't want to listen to on Spotify. "
So how do you achieve that? Do you only use custom playlists, or do just mostly don't care so much?
Because if I have one song in my head, then sometimes I just want this exact song and if I tell spotify to play this song - then afterwards it plays something totally different, even though it tries to fit the same genre, but this works badly. And even if it would be the same genre, some songs are just deep. And you want silence afterwards to process them - if you are consciously listenting in the first place. For some background noise spotify works great, no doubt about that.
I wonder why nobody thought about recreating album sleeves with the original artwork and no vinyl inside, just the housing capable of carrying one or more CDs, that is, giving a CD owner the ability to put their discs into a old-style sleeve. I'm all for digital music, but totally miss the old sleeves and prints. Would it be economically viable for a business to acquire only the rights for the prints, possibly plus lyrics, but not the music, so that they could sell the prints alone?
This is exactly why I have a turntable, too. Just buying the records of my most loved albums, setting aside some time to listen them intently and enjoy the process.
It’s not like meditation. It is meditation. As a meditation teacher, I can definitely say that.
Sometimes I prefer the original vinyl sound compared to the digitally remixed version of the old songs.
But most of my vinyl is of old albums that nobody bothered to re-release on CD. It's fun to buy them cheap at the thrift store, wash them, and see what's on them.
Good points. Just to expand, I find with instant on digital music I never really listen to it with as much attention as vinyl.
In fact I love everything about vinyl except the sort durarion of each side, but even that makes me focus more closely on the experience. I know I'll have to turn it over shortly...
Vinyl is a completly different experience: the smell, the look(!), the age(!), the masting and care for the production, the cover(!)- these things matter.
Yes. People think vinyl is for snobs (especially the silicon valley type) but they don’t seem to realize a) music went digial before the iphone (CDs) and b) most of them don‘t even know much music.
Really? You can appreciate playing, touching, looking at vinyl or watching vinyl beeing played out without beeing a collector or owning some. But it is hard for me to imagine somebody not appreciating vinyl and all the things attached beeing a true pop music lover. With classical music it may be a completely different story.
Dedicating time to listen to a specific album. My kids may never understand it. An album is an interesting art form, it captures a few pieces of time: when it was made and then then it was consumed. The cover art and liner art. The order of the songs. All assembled with intention. There are albums I’ve heard hundreds of time and I will still hear little new bits I never quite noticed before.
I do love digital music and having it everywhere, but it is special to just listen and take it I’m.
Why would your kids not understand it? My son certainly has no problem exploring album art and reading liner notes while he enjoys one of his favorites.
It seems like a fairly universal human quality to want to intentionally listen to music.
Because the comment makes the assumption that it'll conflict with their apparent low attention spans from years of skipping through songs on their music streaming platforms of choice, rendering them unable to sit down to consume an entire album.
I think both if you are reading too much into his comment and seeing things that aren't there. I don't think it was a jab at younger generations inability to appreciate things due to short attention spans, but more expressing sadness that streaming has killed the traditional experience/concept of an album and that it's probably never coming back.
It might not have been intended as a jab, but journalists frequently repeat that x songs on Spotify are skipped after y time, and the conclusion the journalists arrive at is that between this example, and the likes of TikTok and Snapchat, the younger generations have short attention spans.
Cool story, not my point. I'm not questioning the validity of what you're saying or the existence that people think what you're saying, but how you jumped straight to ascribing those views to the original commenter. You can make your own point without the accusations, is my point.
Digital music resparked my interest in vinyl. With streaming you have a great tool to figure out what you really love and need to have on vinyl. Less is more.
I got rid of most of my LP's over the past few years as I realized I'd gradually just started to play them from Spotify instead (convenience slowly converted me), over the same speakers. Then I sold my turntable.
But I kept around 20 of my favorites and just rotate them for display on my bookshelf. If I'm playing one of them on Spotify, I'll even rotate to show that LP while I play it. The really bizarre thing is, there's a particular old album I'm thinking of purchasing just to be able to display its cover, because of what it means to me.
It's the same with books -- my favorite ones are in my bookshelf, but even if I read a book I own physically, I pull it up on my iPad because I prefer to be able to highlight, look up words, adjust text size, read in a dark room, etc.
So I'm shocked to discover that I like having the physical artifacts even when I still consume them digitally. It's almost like bringing back souvenir knick-knacks from a vacation. This is not an outcome I ever would have expected.
Patience! Try putting on a record and listening with friends or dancing to the beat with your significant other. Don't try to cherrypick just one song or conversely listen to endless AI generated mix while your mind is elsewhere. Afterwards, have a conversation about what the artist was trying to express and moments in your own life the songs reminded you of. THEN tell me you didn't have a unique experience compared to what Spotify provides you with.
Why can't you do that EACT same experience on spotify? You realize you can pick a specific album and play it in order correct? The only difference between the two is that with spotify you have options if you lack the self control to go for the experience you are suggesting.
Deliberate restriction is the point of still using a lot of analog media. You can't pop open another app on your book, you can't look at the photo you just took on film, and you can't easily skip a song on a record.
I find that hard to do myself. Spotify doesn't appear to have the same sequence as the LPs or even CDs. Another problem is finding original recordings on Spotify, mostly you find remasterings.
Of course, none of these matter if you just want to listen to music.
I can probably also recreate a grill burger in a microwave, even complete with burn marks somehow. But the real thing is inexpensive and easy to use, so why should I jump through the hoops? Also I have to wonder how long Spotify is going to exist or carry the albums I like. I can still play records made in the 80s with no issues.
If digital liner notes were commonplace, you could at least look at them together on a tablet, even if that might still not be exactly the same thing.
As it is you can't really read the liner notes and admire any photos alone, either, unless you're hunting them down on Discogs or somewhere else, never mind together with somebody else, too.
The iTunes store in theory allows including a PDF booklet together with album purchases, but in practice it seems that albums that actually do include such a thing are almost as rare as hens' teeth.
You need to be on the distraction machine (your laptop), inside the distraction amplifier (your browser) on a very distracting site. Similar it using the app or a phone.
The turntable can work with a literal digital detox (it is analog).
Just admit that you don’t yet understand the other perspective. Resorting to this sort of snark really isn’t in service of reaching a shared understanding.
In the case of many prog rock and similar albums of the late 60s 70s and 80s there are either significant (wrt to the pace of the audio tracks) 'silences' between tracks or no silences with fade out and fade in audio layers ...
The digital versions of a number of these albums have 'clipped' tracks - with a sharp start point | end point and some arbitrary generic silence length (of 0 - N ms) between them.
Seems like a minor thing but it is noticable to those of us that once listened to vinyl albums and the "between track" transition is arguably as much of the overall product as originally delivered as each individual track and track ordering.
The very act, the very ritual of starting a record playing changes the experience, even if everything else is exactly the same. You don't interact with music the same way.
With records versus streaming it’s interesting because the experience during the “main event” is nearly identical. Certainly closer than a book versus an e-reader or a cigar versus nicotine. It’s the entry and exit that’s different.
The fact it's a record and you can't pause/rewind keeps you less distracted. It really is a different experience even if you "simulated it" and had the machine play the right digital file once you loaded a particular record.
It also completely gets rid of skips and shuffle-play. And a song can't "grow on you" if you always skip it.
I don’t think that’s a great example - with good beans and a good grinder and machine, you should be able to do miles better than Nespresso. Even the larger pod systems have quite a small quantity of grounds so tend towards over-extraction for a decent sized shot.
Great example - my Moccamaster since I bought it few months ago is used ten times more than capsule machine that stands next to it. And I'm not sure if the coffe is really better - but it does not matter because the morning ritual makes the experience so much better, that I cannot imagine going back to capsules.
Coffee capsules' business model relies on convenience to create unnecessary waste. Capsules of coffee taste worse and provide no improvement whatsoever. Why do this? Marketing creates a fake need, even though better solutions to brew coffee already exist. It's all about marketing convenience without innovation. You pay a higher tax for unnecessary capsule packaging, additional pollution, and waste.
Club culture was built around people dancing to music played on turntables. Specifically Technics SL1200 mk2 or SL1210 mk2 which only have a very little suspension in their feet.
If you run in mono and there will be almost no feedback no matter how loud you play or how close to the speakers you are.
Since one of the audio channels is inverted when recorded any signal feeding back will be cancelled out when the re-inverted signal is combined.
This is why old DJ mixers from people like Pioneer used have a prominent Stereo/Mono switch.
There's no real soundstage on a dance floor so you don't miss the stereo.
In the really cool venues, back in the day, they used crossovers to move just the high-hats or percussion to a specific speaker array hanging over the centre of the dance floor and have the mids and bass somewhere else but it would always be from a mono signal never stereo.
Source: Phono.
Aux Source: I worked as a DJ way back when and have experience of very loud systems in front of large crowds of dancing people. I've also played many a sketchy flat where everything was balanced on milk crates on wooden floorboards.
Been DJing and running our own sound for years and years.
You 100% can get feedback from the sound when DJing. It’s guaranteed if you’ve enough bass. We put the decks on concrete slabs which in turn are on 4 squash balls to deal with it.
What do you mean by “one it channels is inverted when recorded”??
I mean on record one of the channels L or R is inverted (I forget which) before it’s cut.
The phono pre-amp will re-inver it as part of its function.
When you combine L+R after preamp to make mono the feedback signal from one channel will be combined with inverted feedback signal from the other channel and cancel out.
Try it and be amazed. Audio engineers have known this trick since the dawn of disco.
Look into a suspension design like Thorens or AR. You can stomp on the floor, strike the platform supporting the turntable with a hammer, etc and it won't skip.
To avoid this outcome I started a family tradition where we play a record every time we sit down at the dinner table to eat. We take turns picking an album and let guests pick when we have guests.
Might I guess that the albums are either Pink Floyd or Led Zeppelin? Even when I listen to those two digitally, I like to see the album cover. That has been ingrained as part of the experience for me.
I don't want to start a flame war. This said, I think vinyl sucks; it's my opinion and not some absolute statement about the universe so please respect it! It was the state-of-the art technology when I was kid, but I was so glad it was gone. Digital music is SO much better and I remember the joy of replacing vinyl by CDs and then by high quality digital files.
And because of all of the above, I understand why a lot of the buyers don't have actual record players. Vinyl is a bit like 8-bit cartridge gaming, it's a mix of nostalgia with physicality, holding something fun and cool in your hands. It's more like buying a book... The albums had pretty covers, and I do remember liking to hold them in my hands, read lyrics (often included in an insert) while listening to the music. That was a nice aspect of it, but it was overall so cumbersome and lossy that I'll keep my FLACs, thank you.
Most vinyl records are sold as vinyl + digital anyway.
The appeal to the vinyl is the ritual that we kind of lost buy going digital. I've also gone back to start reusing CDs, at least the little I kept. I donated most of my CD collection when I moved country and kind of regret it.
People keep talking about quality to praise digital media. But most people saying this listen to music through crappy bluetooth speakers nowadays. There is a very small amount of users still using decent hi-fi equipment.
So if people grew up with digital media, they would never have "lost" that ritual. No wonder they don't care about it. Its only purpose is nostalgia.
When mass produced media first became possible, people probably said you could only listen to live music and the experience of not being in a venue was lost. Then everybody who grew up with a gramophone, modern turntables, Sony Walkman, etc, think the version they grew up with is the best because of nostalgia.
> People keep talking about quality to praise digital media. But most people saying this listen to music through crappy bluetooth speakers nowadays. There is a very small amount of users still using decent hi-fi equipment.
Lossless digital recordings are the _closest_ way to listening to the originally produced audio authentically. (It still will have artifacts from the equipment itself - the media is the message after all) You can use crappy equipment to listen to any audio, but digital is closest to ideal.
you are the only one mentionning "best" and "closedt to ideal".
That's not what everybody's looking for otherwise people would stop listening to music in cars, public transports, even eance clubs or wherever there is the tiniest noise pollution.
Quality and being closest to original rank very low in people's media, ___location and equipment decision when it comes to listening to music. Heck we even pay a whole lot more to listen to imperfect music played live in a concert than their studio production counterpart.
And when making music digitally, most daws and sequencers come with a "swing" function to add a bit of imperfection otherwise music feel a bit bland.
I think that fidelity is the only important measure in media because it is what lets the author give the purist possible reproduction of their work to the consumer. All media has a level of degredation between thoughts, words, and interpretations, but digital is the one that has the highest fidelity.
Further, if the author intends, they can take their digital and make a vinyl; or record to vinyl, distribute as digital. (caveat: potentially having a double-lossy situation) Once you have a lossless digital you can publish it over two cans and string if you want. So it is quite literally a superset of analog media.
> “50% of consumers who have bought vinyl in the past 12 months own a record player, compared to 15% among music listeners overall.”
No way in hell do 15% music listeners own record players.
Assuming Luminate's numbers are not entirely made up, their sampling method must be deeply flawed, which brings into question their ability to determine how many record buyers own a record player. Maybe they asked the question in some idiotic way that confused the respondents.
> No way in hell do 15% music listeners own record players.
That's also a weird statement in general, sure there might be a group of people who actively avoid music, but aren't most of us music listeners. Perhaps there's some special meaning to "music listeners" as a term.
Definitely seems nebulous, but I would consider myself not a music listener. Outside of it being paired with a movie/game/video/etc, I practically never listen to music just to listen to music.
15% of music listeners probably don't have a record player set up ready to be used.
Record players, however, are a really common sight in garages and the back of closets. Even younger folks have picked them up from estate sales and flea markets on a whim and never used them.
>Most people older than 40 got a record players decades ago
That seems unlikely. I'm in my mid 40s and I bought my first music on compact cassette, but that was almost immediately supplanted by CDs. I never owned a record player.
I think that's closer to being true of people over 60. I'm almost 40 and never even came close to owning vinyl, it was all already CDs when I was young and cassettes before that.
Limited edition type stuff or just eclectic music I enjoy.
I bought an Audio-Technica AT-LP120BK-USB (and a cartridge, because, the one which came with my 300 record player was "trash") after I had accumulated a handful of them. Picked out the TRON: Legacy soundtrack and got it all hooked up.
For some context, I have a nice sound system which is optimized for movies/tv though I listen to a fair bit of music too.
If you're not aware, the TRON: Legacy soundtrack was produced by Daft Punk and Daft Punk was made for TRON: Legacy and TRON: Legacy was made for Daft Punk and the result is magical.
Started playing and the sound was great. Flipped over to Spotify and played the same album and the sound was also great.
Honestly, couldn't tell the difference.
Played one or two other things, but, the record player went on a shelf that day and is still there.
I still collect records, especially rare or limited ones of things I particularly like, or ones where there's something unique or special about the vinyl copy, but, I don't listen to them anymore.
> the record player went on a shelf that day and is still there.
When I moved I never plugged in my amplifier and speakers for my record player because I couldn't figure out where to put them. Eventually I realized that they didn't need to be on the floor "waiting" for me to set them up -now they're in the garage while the records/player are out on display. I just listen to music via a smart speaker and streaming most days.
I still buy the occasional vinyl though. I like them as gifts because they're physical and also personal. I tell everyone to give me a record of an album that means a lot to them so I can think of them when I play it (because gifts are about emotions, even if I don't play them directly).
I've tried to have a good sound system. I've been to friends' houses that have nice ones.
I got an array of Sonos speakers and ask an Echo to play things on them. It's a wonderful, maintenance-free experience and, combined with Spotify's access to most things I'd want, makes intentional listening a zero-friction experience.
Whether you can hear a difference is going to depend partly on the equipment and mostly on the particular album you’re playing. I don’t think tron legacy got a vinyl specific master/mix so it’s basically just a recreation of the digital mix - if anything you might lose a little detail because it takes a pretty high end turntable to be 100% as transparent as a decent digital setup. On the other hand, if you look at a catalog like Blue Note’s for example, all of their vinyl releases are remasters made specifically for the format. Especially compared to the Rudy Van Gelder 90s digital remasters on streaming, there’s a pretty immediately obvious difference in sound. Not really a “if know what to look for” thing either, on some recordings it is very obvious.
This goes beyond vinyl vs digital too. What mix/master was used can make a difference in any context with different formats. Giorgio Moroder’s From Here to Eternity hasn’t gotten a transfer from the master tapes in decades, and the version on streaming is actually a rip from a vinyl record or another poor quality or worn transfer. If you seek out a CD mastered directly from the tape, there’s an incredible difference in the dynamic range.
Maybe. Maybe my ears just aren't good enough to hear the difference (I don't have particularly good hearing).
Anyway, I'm not unhappy about it. I love the soundtrack (and the music on every Vinyl I own) and I love that I own the Vinyl copy. Some have really cool artwork/books included which just don't exist anywhere else.
I think, perhaps, the point you're making is that the master matters more than the medium, which I would strongly agree with.
Yeah, that’s my point - I have a small vinyl collection but it’s mostly jazz albums with vinyl specific masters. I haven’t noticed any special vinyl specific sound myself beyond whatever the engineers intentionally created but for whatever reason some albums get significantly different treatments for vinyl. I’m not sure if the better margins for the format pay for the remaster work or what - I’ve noticed some labels do SACD releases too. So I guess the format has charmed me after all, because I haven’t bought any SACDs :)
Funny enough there’s definitely some vinyl releases where the opposite occurred and they get a sloppy transfer or the label literally just presses an mp3 that already exists, especially now that they’re booming among people who won’t actually play them (or won’t play them on decent equipment.) So you can go out and potentially buy a vinyl record that just replays a digital master with poorer compression than what’s on streaming.
Definitely agree regarding everything else that comes with the package. I have the Myst box set because that game had such an impact on my life and it’s so well done with extra books, maps, etc.
I buy a lot of new rap vinyl because having a physical copy is the only way to guarantee the music doesn’t change (unless you can find and download the files online which can be hard)
Many artists don’t clear samples and are forced to make updates or remove them entirely.
While streaming has given us quick access to almost any music, it has also created a new impermanence in the industry that’s very frustrating.
On top of that, it’s not uncommon for rap albums on vinyl to come with the instrumentals that are never made available on streaming at all. I’ve been ripping them to have the MP3s on the go
It's CDs that ensure music doesn't change. The music changes every time you play a vinyl record, as well as simply while the LP is on the shelf. CDs by contrast store an immutable copy of the music.
Yes, but their chosen solution is vulnerable to the media itself altering, which is not the case with CDs (which aren’t vulnerable to licensing issues either).
A friend made me a copy of Robyn Hitchcock’s “Black Snake Diamond Röle” when I was 16 or so. Totally floored me, it’s imprinted on my brain.
It was re-released a few years ago, but the opening track is missing the sax because they no longer could find the master tapes with it. The song on Spotify and new pressings is just not the same at all.
That’s my reason for always buying a physical copy if I can.
An excellent point. A prime example of this is "Captain Murphy - Duality", which currently costs 1300$ on Discogs. It's a record released in 2013 in limited copies with high unlikely chance it gets reissued due to sample clearance restrictions.
Great point. I'm annoyed every time I listen to Biggie and the songs have been changed. Luckily I have most of the original CDs, but have been too lazy to re-rip.
It’s great that musicians can sell a high cost item (vastly greater revenue vs streams per customer), but I do worry the labels are over-indulging here and heading the market towards a Funkopop like crash. Most record stores I go into have reoriented towards very mainstream new releases and overpriced ‘rare’ vintage albums. Meanwhile the more serious collectors market has moved to Discogs and Bandcamp/direct. So when the market turns on vinyl, physical stores will be the biggest direct losers. And even an average shop in the neighborhood is better than none at all.
Funkopop collections are a 2010s/2020s Beanie Babies. They released so many licensed lines that eventually the demand waned and collectors had ‘lost’ thousands.
Crash as in they made too many and nobody is buying them. Funkopop has more vinyl characters than demand resulting warehouses full of inventory that isn’t moving.
I don't know if it is guys like me skewing the numbers here, but I have a not insignificant LP collection that I've had for over 30 years now. I got rid of my record player decades ago when moving house but carted my LPs around, with the intent to buy a decent home stereo setup once I got established again and had the disposable income to buy something decent.
I am at that stage now, so will invest in a decent HiFi kit sometime this year. I guess I am also a bit old school in that I don't really listen to music while working etc., so things like Spotify and Apple Music etc. are not my thing. I treat listening to music as a bit of an event, that harkens back to my younger days of having album 'listening parties', so I expect I will still consume my music that way again once I get my record player.
I (sometimes) buy vinyl and don’t (currently) own a record player. I like to support artists however I can, and especially for works I particularly appreciate. I also like to have the physical liner notes and accompanying artwork, especially in large format. Having the actual recording on a physical medium which I control is a nice bonus and can come in handy even for lifetime purchases when access to digital purchases might expire or their providers might vanish (this happened with one of my albums before I ever got a download code, but since it came with the physical album I don’t need to go online to try to resolve it by whatever means I might need to).
This is obviously bunk, but I'm sure these people do exist, because I was previously one of them (in a pre-Spotify era).
I felt guilty for pirating some of my favourite albums, so I bought them on vinyl because it seemed cool to get a tangible, physical representation of my contribution. Meanwhile I continued to listen to the FLAC's.
50% figure for vinyl sounds plausible to me, considering cost of turntable and hassle of actually using it (unless you enjoy the ritual and experience of physical media). And vinyl makes great merch.
Pretty sure there’s a lot of vinyl gifting going on. Rich dudes are hard to shop for, but they don’t shut up about their record collection, simple solution for secret Santa this year.
As a rich dude, there's pretty much zero chance that anyone is going to be able to buy me a record for my record collection that I don't shut up about unless I specifically tell them what to buy.
For the bands I really like, I mostly have everything I want. But if you did manage to figure out a record I want, you would need to know which version of the release I want. For some records there are dozens. Maybe I want the first release, maybe I want the first US release, maybe I want a higher quality reissue, maybe I want a colored vinyl release. But whichever one I want, if you get me a different one it goes in the trash and I keep the release I want on my want list.
Then you've got to figure out what condition to buy it in. If it is something I'm getting to collect rather than to listen to, it needs to be near mint. If you get me very good condition instead of near mint, it goes in the trash, and I keep it on my want list. If it is something I'm getting to listen to rather than to collect, VG+ is fine. You can get it near mint, but you just wasted $50 because near mint is hard to find, and it isn't going to be near mint after I listen to it a few times.
So skip the vinyl for Xmas, if you're going to get me a gift, money works. I'm not picky about condition or version. Cash, money orders, bonds, it's all good. Or real estate.
But if you insist on gifting vinyl, I'm looking for the Weirdos "We Got The Neutron Bomb" single, 1978 release, near mint, the unofficial colored vinyl Beastie Boy singles from Paul's Boutique, I want them all but if you can only get one, "Car Thief", near mint, and the 1987 "Gimme Fever" single by Shake Appeal (first band Adam Franklin from Swervedriver was in, along with his brother), VG+ is fine.
Vinyl is imperfect, heavy, fragile, and difficult to maintain.
The sound is objectively less precise than digital, and playback comes with surface noise, pops, and all.
Choosing a cartridge affects the quality of the sound so much that it can be an expensive part of the setup (and needles need to be regularly changed!).
Vinyl has a lot of drawbacks but vinyl is offline, private, and a cherished possession. The lack of dynamic is actually what I love about it.
I have 2 20years old record players (Technics MK2), a mixer (Rane TTM56) and Taruya Cartridges.
I love to play vinyls selections with very little mixing technique. I record each little session, and broadcast them on my very own little icecast server.
The Vinyl culture is a great one. We don’t always need what is the most convenient or the most precise. We just need what feels good to us.
One thing all these comments bringing up "so are CDs" miss is the open physicality of vinyl. The above poster is talking about mixing vinyl records, which with CDs all becomes digital. With vinyl, you're physically placing a needle on top of a section of the disc, changing the physical speed of the rotations, etc.
I laugh at the fragile part. What's fragile are turn of the 20th century Soviet 78's and wax records. The only things that will fuck up regular records are: sitting on them, leaving them in a hot car, or pilling them up outside of sleeves. If you're not a careless slob, regular records are pretty damn forgiving.
Interesting trend overall. I got my dad a vinyl record for Christmas, and he only recently got a record player to listen to it. I wonder about vinyl buying vs listening demographics and how age correlates: my partner and I, along with some similar-generation friends, are avid vinyl listeners. We still use Spotify to listen to music together, either collaborative or generated playlists, and we generally set a high standard of matching the music we select to our mood, but the process of discovering and listening to records together has become one that we treat differently from digital listening. We are more forgiving and open (less “you picked this?” and more going with the flow) and have some irreverent discs that have established themselves as favorites through this process :)
When I was young, I amassed an extensive and impressive collection of vinyl both common and rare, bankrolled mostly by my saintly grandmother. I would stroll around the mall with her on a Sunday and pop into the Wherehouse or the indie record store, and enjoy chatting up a much older blonde clerk before filling my arms with more music than I could ever listen to during the ensuing week.
When I was older and shopped for myself, I'd drive my friends to Tower or the far-flung indie stores, and it was at the latter where I really developed a taste for the rare and near-unobtainables. Then I began to purchase Goldmine magazines, which was the sine qua non for collectors, and I got hooked up with "Record Finding Services" in the UK, which was some dude who'd walk into a store on your behalf and pick up something that wasn't even available on import in the US.
I don't know how many records in total I had, but I proudly boasted of over 100 items by The Cure alone. And you know that old question "Did you read all these books on your shelves?" well I did certainly get around to listening to almost all of the music... at least once.
When CDs came out I embraced the tech and branched out. That didn't entirely put an end to my vinyl purchases, as that was still where the rare and desirable stuff was at, for a long time.
Fast forward to my move to the desert, and in the throes of impending homelessness, I began to sell off my vinyl for pocket money. I wasn't able to keep this up and make rent on the storage locker. My records were eventually sold to the highest bidder. It was a tragedy to be sure.
Then I entered a period where I realized that I didn't need to consume massive amounts of music, and I didn't purchase anything. In fact, my choral activities gave me many opportunities to make my own music, such that it was much more interesting than passive grooving.
Fast forward to 2023: I don't own any device that plays music other than my computers. I have no turntable, no CD drive at all. My music purchases remain firmly at $0. The best music is all over YouTube as much as I want, and on-the-go I am very satisfied with public ___domain cuts of prayers, classical pieces, and ambient instrumentals while I work.
I am rather glad to be relieved of an insatiable thirst to consume new music; it was an expensive vice, and I was often exploited by my favorite artists as they released endless "collectibles" that I had to catch like Pokémon.
There's a lot to like about vinyls. I could list many things but the thing that stands out for me is that it forces careful curation. It also leads to a unique form of selection in that I can browse my selection and find something that I really want to listen to that I would not have otherwise thought of. Sure you can browse endless lists of digital music, but the visual cue of the cover and the labels and the idiosyncratic sorting methods (or lack thereof) leads to a different kind of set list.
I only bought stuff on vinyl back in the 80s if I was pretty sure I’d never find it on CD (this was back when being able to buy music relied on it being in whatever record store you happened to go into). In the early 90s I sold it all and it turned out my expectation of not being able to find most of that stuff on CD was correct. On the plus side, there’s very little of that which I can even remember (the only ones I can remember are some Mike Rutherford solo albums from before Mike + the Mechanics).
I do still buy music, but it’s now almost exclusively in the form of digital downloads. I know a lot of what I have is not on most of the streaming services and quite possibly never will be.
It's funny how in the early 2000's, everybody was selling their Technics and buying expensive Pionner CDJ 2000 (like $2000 a pair), and now the CDJs are basically worthless while a pair of MKII can fetch $1000 on Ebay.
CDJs still are the go-to thing for 90% of DJs though.
The difference is, being a digital thing with some sort of basic computer in them, they keep updating them.
So your CDJ1000’s with no support for USB drives are worth very little. Pioneer realise they’ve a nice racket and will keep releasing newer models with slight improvements to make the older ones “obsolete”. But CDJs in general are still very much sought after.
Whereas your 1210 is just as useful as it was back when you first got it. Also the fact they stopped making them helps.
This sounds absurd. Are that many people compulsive hoarders or using them as hipster decorations? If so, no wonder I can't find El-P's early shit on Discogs.
I've got a tiny-ass collection of maybe 500 records.
2 turntables with AT microline cartridges and all the damn leveling, mirrors, gauges, and force measuring accoutrement.
Then there's the shit for dust including the static gun and the toxic chemicals.
And you got your giant Orbeeze needle cleaner.
I could give a left rat ball about analog purity or vacuum tubes of know-nothing audiophile snobs. It's ADC'ed at the mixer and sent 100' (~30 m) around the room over an active HDMI cable to the amp.
"This sounds absurd. Are that many people compulsive hoarders or using them as hipster decorations?"
Indeed. I know plenty of people like this. In some rare cases they have a record player but it's less expensive than individual albums, and they don't really use it, except for listening to it once or twice.
I have bought CDs, cassette tapes, download from Napster, burn CDs, etc. but Vynil hasn’t really attracted attention to me. Turntable seems to be an inconvenient and overpriced device, I could be wrong though.
I'm a part-time DJ and turntabling is so much better on vinyl than on a jog wheel. But of course you're limited to the physical crate you're willing to lug with you, and one PLX-1000 weighs about three times as much as a DJ-505. Timecode vinyl solves the crate problem but not the weight problem, so nowadays I only do vinyl when clients specifically ask (and are willing to pay more).
That said, Numark and a few others have battery-powered portable turntables for 45's (or rather 7" 33's, which is a thing now) and holy crap are those fun.
1000% get that turntablist / scratch DJs prefer turntables.
But for the kind of beat-matching and quick mixes I do (reggae/dancehall mostly), CDJs are much better imo. Finer control for every degree of turning the platter, plus cue points to get back to quickly.
It’s a preference I guess. I still buy LPs to listen to at home, but when it comes to performing 100% digital.
Yeah, when I do an EDM set I love the jog wheel for tweaking the phase and tempo (though nowadays you just press the sync button, kids today, get off my lawn, etc.) But I'm mostly doing geriatric hip hop, and one thing I love about the vinyl resurgence is a lot of 80s and 90s stuff got reissued.
That is one thing I love about Mixxx and Xwax: with timecode vinyl a drop really sounds like a drop.
I’ve been buying a lot of albums on Bandcamp, and in most cases I get the vinyl or cassette, which comes with the digital download for free.
I plan to get a record player, and full hifi. I do have a cassette setup, tho I use primarily for recording. The few tapes I bought were to a/b test against the digital on my cassette recording setup. And the fact that it’s often only a few $$ difference in price.
I got sick of “owning nothing” via the Spotify model. I like that Bandcamp gives me the option to get the files so I can do as a please with them.
I lived through reel-to-reel, vinyl, 8-track, cassette, CD, minidisc, and now digital files. Of those, only reel-to-reel came even remotely close to the sound quality of digital. I can now fit my entire music library onto a storage medium smaller than my thumbnail, at better quality than anything before it. I get that many people like the vintage aspect (like folks who carry around pocket watches or walkmans), but there comes a point where it crosses over from eccentric to just plain weird (like going out in a top hat and tails).
I am a proud owner of a top hat and tails. I also enjoy a somewhat direct mechanism for giving money to artists I admire, and having an attractive physical artifact of that transaction is a plus. For the (ahem) record, not all vinyl purchases are a somewhat-direct-to-artist transaction (though those at the merch table of a small-to-medium sized show probably are).
You should really be more specific. Digital file sound quality can range from crap (<=64kbps MP3) to higher than CD quality (losslessly compressed 24 bit 96kHz audio) - BTW CDs are digital too.
There's no need to be more specific. Those who are interested in serious discussion will take the plausible interpretation. Those who seek a weaker interpretation for attack aren't worth talking to.
It sounds different than a pristine digital version of the same track, although often vinyl tracks are mastered differently due to the limitations of the medium.
If you were to digitally record the output of a record player and play it back, there would be no discernible difference.
Audio is audio? 4 bit mono sounds the same as 16 bit stereo?
Vinyl sounds blatantly different due to analog distortion in the vinyl mastering and playback mechanisms. The distortion, frequency response, dynamic range, are all significantly different. You must be practically deaf to not hear the difference between vinyl and CD quality.
Pointless conflation of quality and storage capacity.
CDs are stereo 16-bit @ 44kHz PCM with an upper limit of about 80 minutes. That's 80 * 60 * 2 * 2 * 44100 = 846,720,000 bytes = ~807 MiB / 80 minutes.
I can get a 1 TiB thumb drive and put 1200 CD audio ISO images on it. Of course, that's pointless because one can rip tracks as FLAC to get lossless compression.
Blu-Ray audio has options including 24-bit PCM @ 192 kHz. 2 channel stereo is 60 * 60 * 2 * 3 * 192000 / hr = 4,147,200,000 bytes/hr = ~4 GiB/hr. Even with FLAC, I wouldn't expect more than 500 albums per thumb drive.
For several years, I bought older vinyl not for the vinyl itself, but for the cover art, which I hung on my living room walls with Records on Walls: https://www.recordsonwalls.com/. Many of them have an aesthetic quality all of their own, like the gatefold of Led Zeppelin IV, or the subtle yet iconic "EKG" from Dark Side of the Moon.
It's much more recently that I acquired a turntable and a preamp, so that I can actually listen to them.
I’ve been listening to a lot of Spotify the last 5 years for a few different reasons.
I actually unarchived my mp3s yesterday because there is some stuff not on there. I have a lot of random things that never showed up on Spotify, and even more random cds I never ripped from bands in Salt Lake City during the ‘00 which probably nobody will ever care about.
If it was a decade earlier or later it would have been tape or vinyl+download, but DIY releases from 2000-2010 was all CD.
The artwork, notes etc. on LPs was often very cool. I could see buying favorite albums just to look at front and back while playing the music electronically...
There's an album I love that have the most amazing retro 60s, early 70s inspired cover design. I wanted to get the LP to have the cover in larger format, sadly it was never release on anything but streaming platforms.
I stream lots of music, but am aware that the artist receives a very small payment from this, certainly not enough to make a living.
I tend to therefore view purchasing vinyl as a way of funding the artist as they get a decent cut from this, certainly compared to streaming services.
I do own a record player though, and do play the purchased records, but this is a continuation of a hobby back from the days when this was the only decent way of buying music.
> but am aware that the artist receives a very small payment from this
That’s (part of) why I don’t stream and instead buy the music digitally on bandcamp (or Amazon if I’m forced to, but that’s mostly major label stuff which I don’t buy often).
While I appreciate the sentiment behind this, managing and organising a local collection of digital files is a lot of hassle which is why I was happy to ditch it for streaming.
I used to collect vinyls a lot. Then music streaming services happened and I sold my record player to make space for other things. 10 years after doing that I have rediscovered my passion and bought a new Rega Planar I turntable. Best investment in years. I’m very fortunate I kept all my records. I now listen to music intentionally again and got rid of the “instant gratification” that streaming services provide.
I do both. Tidal and Spotify. The amp I have supports 20+ services. The 4 channel mixer I have is c. 1996 but it can add basic effects. I would never scratch on these turntables because the arms are all wrong for it. Having 2 tt's is primarily for gapless playback.
This makes me feel like I'm taking crazy pills. I've read 95%+ of the thousands of books I have owned, many read multiple times, and played all but a bare handful of the 214 games I have on steam. I'm not a completionist on games, so by no means have I beaten/completed the majority, but still, do people just have free money hanging around?
Yes, some people do have free money hanging around. It's what drives a large part of the economy. If you don't have an ethos of saving, don't have a family then (assuming a decent wage) your money will tend to go to your hobbies. For a lot of people, their hobby is basically buying things.
Steam sales encourage this behaviour though. I will have an intention to play a certain game. If I see it's heavily reduced now, it might make seem to make sense to buy it now even if I don't have the time to play it, rather than get it later when it might be full price.
Ah. Yeah, to be fair, I was taking a completionist view. I've read most of my books. I have not done most of the exercises in them. Akin to how I have played many games. But completed far fewer.
That said, I'd guess I'm in the 70% realm of both. Who knew having a family was so much time? :)
Yeah that's legit. I mean, I count even booting a game up and throwing a few hours into it and not feeling it, same with a book - if you get a chapter or two deep, the author is just not getting there, that's a solid attempt. I read and enjoyed a big chunk of Tolstoy but you don't have to get to "The End" to be able to honestly say you're reading Anna Karenina.
I know there are lots of people out there that buy books and never read them, not even page one, same as there are lots of 2200-game steam libraries where most are not played, but at the end of the day those people are playing a different metagame, I guess, so more power to them.
While I hope to read all of the books I have (circumstance may have other plans), usually I have 50% unread. That gives me some choice about what to read next; everyone needs an antilibrary.
I have bought maybe 10 or so records over the years without having a record player. It supports the band more than streaming. It is a relatively cheap physical souvenir and is a better display piece than a cd. And they usually come with a download code for the same music. Actually listening to the vinyl wasn't even much of a consideration when making the purchases.
this is me - most shows I buy a shirt and/or a record. got the DL code... play it in winamp. I have had a turntable or two but not right now - but when I do, I'll have a great collection of records to listen to. Everybody wins!
I generally haven't seen an avenue to do that. Bandcamp has the pay what you want option, but I'm not aware of a donating option. I also listed multiple reasons for buying vinyl and supporting the artist is only one of them.
I couldn’t afford to get into vinyl now. I have bought quite a lot of records over the last five years, mainly to support the brand new record shop that appeared in my town - the first place selling vinyl in twenty years - but gone are the days when I could come back with a literal bag full of records from a holiday in Toronto taking advantage of the exchange rate, and my turntable has more than doubled in price over the years.
They are still wonderful artefacts, the artwork in its full glory, and so much of my record collection isn’t getting anywhere near Spotify or Apple Music - or my CDs for that matter.
And on that front, I’ve been frequenting my local charity shops where CDs are only £1/€1 and walking out with stacks of great music. I gather CDs are becoming cool again
Whenever I play music for myself, I care less about convenience and more about the overall emotional experience.
Vinyl means many things to me. It’s a reminder of my father’s collection, a memory from a visit to some new place that had a record shop, the proud of owning something tangible from an artist you love.
The premise is not rational at all to me.
However I have also spend a lot of time (and money) obsessing about the quality / condition of the vinyl, the cartridge setup and matching to the preamp and the overall turntable setup.
That part is a rather good mix of theory and manual adjustments, and honestly makes for a fun hobby on top of record collecting or music listening.
But yes vinyl can be frustrating. Receiving a poorly pressed disc only to have to return it kind of sucks.
I'm an old, I grew up with vinyl, walked into stereo stores with dozens of turntables to sell, have about 200 records from back then.
I was glad to leave it all behind, first with CDs then digital. My main memories of vinyl was constantly trying to keep dust off the needle, off the records, not touching them with my fingerprints. There was a special brush that you put some special liquid on that, got the dust off, waited for it to evaporate...I just wanted to listen to music.
I did buy a USB turntable a few years ago but that was to capture music from the obscure Atlanta new wave bands that didn't make it to digital. And even those I can now find on YouTube, someone's done the work for me.
In the late 80s and early 90s the way I got punk was at local stores that sold vinyl - usually punk rock only, or in the 90s both punk and ska. It was inconvenient because as a teen I'd want to listen to my music on cassette with a Walkman but not every band could afford a cassette release - especially local punk bands. So intentional listening became a part of my music culture.
I still have a record player I bought years ago and I listen to vinyl records on it from time to time. I will usually buy a record of an album that's particularly special to me. I've fought enough with jammed CD players to probably never consider the same approach with compact discs.
I own one record, a used Chuck Mangioni record I bought as ironic art from a goodwill that sits in a frame on my wall. So I'm afraid I'm adding to this statistic somewhat inadvertently.
I have Judas Priest's "Sad Wings Of Destiny" and Dead Kennedy's "In God We Trust, Inc". I bought them back before vinyl died and have held on to them as keepsakes of years gone by. I haven't had a record player since the 90's so I guess I'm part of the 50% as well!
I bought as a record to play Small Faces Ogden's Nut Gone Flake back in 1978 (released in 1968) .. the cover is a gem, round carboard layers with a common one inch spine all modelled on an old school tobacco tin.
As one of the few not square record covers released I have it out in a double perspex holder and rarely handle it as it wouldn't take much to tear the hinging 50 years on after its creation.
Many buy records for the aesthetic, for the Instagram. You know, the counter-cultural, non mass-market, non mainstream, "I don't watch TV, lol", underground "think different" kind of thing.
Just like many buy books that they never intend to read to use as a nice video call backdrop. It's important to have the proper mix between eclectical and practical books, some technical, some art. Honestly there is a startup in here, creating a "proper" book list, suitable for your ingroup.
I’ve always bought cds to support artists i like, even during the napster days, and even now in the world of streaming.
I used to buy digipaks, since they were more limited, had cool artwork and more features. These days, i buy records for the same reason.
Mostly, it comes down to being able to own something physical that is well crafted and beautiful. Vinyl fits this well also, since you get things like limited press special vinyls etc.
I find myself buying more vinyl, and i’m also in the same boat as people in the article as i don’t have a record player (yet)
I can see this. I owned a record store in the 90s, and an ecomm spin off of the store from 97 to 07. In any case, "diggin in the creates" as its said is an adventure. It's a ritual. Thumbing through bins, holding and admiring the cover art...maybe talking to other shoppers. It's unique. And certainty can't be duplicated online.
As something to do with friends. As something to collect (a la baseball cards), I can see it. I guess that's why there are used records stores popping up.
If you invest a small amount over what you would with a Crosley into playback, you'd get why people seek out vinyl, especially older or really good modern pressings.
Sadly, a lot of pressings these days are pretty bad, so it taints the listener's concept of what vinyl could sound like (in addition to the Crosley).
That said, if people want to spend $30-50 on a random color variant they'll never listen to, then mozel.. they could act as an investment or just art.
The vinyl record is a physical NFT for these buyers. It’s a way to support the artist, it’s perhaps collectible, and (unlike a digital NFT) it looks and feels nice.
I have a very, very small amount of vinyl. It's almost all "albums which do not exist on CD." I typically buy them still sealed, if at all possible. At some point, I will pay to have them digitized by a professional.
I get it for old stuff, as the technology did not exist then, but for new stuff, the artists who insist on only releasing on vinyl and cassette, well, that's irritating.
I started buying vinyl when that was all there was, at first only in mono. Having accumulated a wide shelf full, plus tapes, and CDs I gave away my vinyl to my son in law with the advent of streaming. Being a music lover, not an audiophile, I have no regrets other than I should have (or should now) make a list of what I had.
That said, there is a definite excitement in rediscovering lost favourite tracks.
I definitely do this. I miss having a physical manifestation of my music and so I've bought a bunch of my favorite albums on vinyl and mounted them in my office. The vinyl albums are much bigger and have much more of a presence (than say a cd) and generally have more artwork etc. I can always play the music digitally so it's not actually about the playing of the music.
I have a bunch of vinyl left over from my DJing days that I likely won't get rid of, but I have already digitized it all so I likely won't keep the decks forever.
I have also considered collecting skateboards because I think the art is awesome, but canonically I was a rollerblader when I was younger. I think that's probably the same thing for vinyl collections.
I bpught the Say She She vinyl off the band when they were in town (signed!). I have a turntable but the vinyl included a download album mp3s link, so I've never played the vinyl. Pretty common I suspect.
I have quite a lot of rare vinyl and a good turntable but it's a pain constantly getting up to change records unless you're in the mood.
Anecdatally, I have a collection of ~50 vinyl records and don't own a record player.
I have some pretty high-end audio gear, so I'm sure one day I'll get one, but until then it's just my preferred way of supporting the artists I like. I've never really thought about it, it just happened that way.
This is just more evidence that new technology never completely destroys old technology. It simply creates new formats that coexist with the older ones, but the older ones never go away and may even fetch a premium by collectors or people who need it.
Of course they don't. About half of my modest modern vinyl collection were gifts.
It's also a collectible, meaning lots of people buy for reselling, and lots of people treat vinyl the same way as Lego or comics, never taking it out from the wrap.
I don't own a good record player, but I like to support small artists that I really enjoy. I do usually also buy the CD if I can and rip it to FLACs to play on my phone.
well since nobody here has mentioned it one of the big draws of vinyl (certainly to us djs) is that on a turntable like a technics you can adjust the tempo with no loss in quality. this isn't possible digitally.
that means put on your favorite rap album, drop the speed 2% and now the bass hits 2% harder ;)
It's entirely possible digitally, although I've never encountered consumer playback software that did it. Digital audio editors will do it with resampling and there's no loss in quality. You can learn about digital signal processing to understand why quality is unaffected.
so actually i've built digital signal processing software :) the argument becomes a little nuanced at this level -- we should define what we mean by "quality".. and i think the explanation for "why/how" the sound is affected in the digital vs analog case is quite interesting for anyone with the time to explicate! that said, agree my choice of words was too strong. really just mean as far as what is accessible for an average listener, there is no comparison to the simple analog control of a vinyl record.
I am planning to get into this whole record player thing just because I can enjoy music and focus on just listening to what I like. These music streaming platforms apply too much dark patterns to trap me into just keep browsing and keep checking new/unknown and mostly shitty music that it is genuinely frustrating.
In fact I had a good deal going - finally had a decent collection of playlists on Spotify and I enjoyed it for few months but then they keep changing their UX and everything else keeps coming in the way - podcasts, some smart shuffle of the library curated by me. One mistake click and there you have unknown god-knows-what songs in your library and you are wondering where the fuck they come from. Then one song you clicked by mistake or forgot to skip or dislike and for next few weeks your entire home screen is filled with shit like that. I mean yes one can say just go to the library and skip the home page and recommendation but you see it every time you open it and distracts and disgusts.
I mean it has just one job - let me listen to the music I want and get out of my way and it keeps putting its foot in the cracks, not on every opportunity, but by manufacturing opportunities. Apple Music has its own downsides. It's just sad.
The most I loved my music experience when I used to listen to using the radio and cassette players. I never got into CDs - it was straight to curated MP3 collection from cassettes. So the hope is vinyls will at least some of that experience and the feeling of my own curated collection. One downside is vinyls are prohibitively expensive and no easy to procure in India.
So no the convenience of streaming services is not really a convenience - it's just we pay to hear and see an ad platform or listen to explicit ads to again experience an ad platform if you don't pay a fee. That is really what the likes of Netflix and Spotify are - ad platforms.
The crackle, pop and hiss from a vinyl record is such a warm and comfortable sound, I can see why people would want to go back to something so imperfect after sterile digital.
I have vinyl. I don't have a turntable yet. I live in a rented house and there's no room. My vinyl lives in flight cases[0] so when I move out (and I may have to do that in a hurry when the time comes) I can put them in a truck and know they're safe.
According to Discogs, I have 115 releases in my collection[1]. According to Bandcamp, I have 600+ releases in my collection[2]. These two are closely linked.
I started buying vinyl (for the second time) near the start of lockdown in 2020, spurred on in part by all the live events being cancelled. >95% of all my vinyl comes via Bandcamp, and ~90% of that is saved for Bandcamp Friday[3] (the ~10% being short run or a limited purchase window where I can't really wait).
Vinyl pressing plants were backed up with orders, sometimes the wait time was months, and that became the norm for a while. Shipping charges were…OK…but there were delays with couriers being swamped. Then the Ukraine situation happened and fuel prices went into orbit. Shipping charges for these plastic discs got a lot more expensive. Even now they're pretty insane in the UK compared to a few years ago. Shipping internationally? Brace yourself, that's gonna sting. Moving plastic stuff around the world in a way that it doesn't get damaged involves thought about the materials, courier track record, etc.
Legend has it that Adele's 2021 album was pushed to the top of the pressing plant queue thanks to a considerable financial incentive from her record label, which had knock-on delays across the industry[4]. A subsequent legend has it that the demand was significantly overestimated and the surplus stock ended up in goodwill[5].
Me? I'm still waiting optimistically for Special Request's "Zero Fucks"[6] on vinyl, but as each day passes I'm less sure it'll actually happen:
>Vinyl editions to follow in 2020 and will be released and deleted on the same day. Pay 0.00 for these downloads. Enjoy life.
credits (released December 30, 2019)
2020 didn't really pan out as we expected, after all.
I’m dubious. The same survey resulted in only 9% of vinyl record owners not having a record player in 2016. I’d like to see the actual questions asked.
All that to say I mostly just like collecting colored vinyl, and supporting small bands and artists you like by buying a product significantly more profitable than millions of Spotify streams is pretty cool.