Just ordered a vinyl of Waylon Jennings album “Dreaming My Dreams” from 1975…greatest country album of all time to my mind. I’m not a vinyl guy, but do any of you have anything cool?
I’m not a vinyl guy, but do any of you have anything cool?
Might be the same reasons as #1 and #2 above. Artists are getting reamed by digital piracy and Spotify/Pandora paying pennies for 100,000 downloads. Putting out new music on vinyl/cassette may level the playing field a bit for recording artists. Now, if we could just find some artists that put out music worth owning...For some reason cassettes are coming back too. I've noticed acts that are popular with the younger crowd (like Taylor Swift) are putting out their albums on cassettes again.
Might be the same reasons as #1 and #2 above. Artists are getting reamed by digital piracy and Spotify/Pandora paying pennies for 100,000 downloads. Putting out new music on vinyl/cassette may level the playing field a bit for recording artists. Now, if we could just find some artists that put out music worth owning...![]()
Eh?Three, I happen to like the richness of the analog sound vs. digital (harmonics tend to get filtered out with digital).
I have a Parlophone first pressing mono release of The Beetles Sgt. Pepper's album. Decent shape. Mono is worth more than the stereo version. Sounds like it should be worth a lot but truth be told, at most I might get $150 for it. Still nice to have in my collection.
I have a Parlophone first pressing mono release of The Beetles Sgt. Pepper's album. Decent shape. Mono is worth more than the stereo version. Sounds like it should be worth a lot but truth be told, at most I might get $150 for it. Still nice to have in my collection.
I don't think it is that. Vinyl IMO sounds better plus it gives real music fans an excuse not to just hit skip. Cassettes sound like garbage, have always sounded like garbage, and most kids have probably never seen one before. I have a 13 year old niece and I doubt she has ever even seen a tape player. Its just the whole 'retro' thing. I'm sure at some point people will start demanding movies come out in SD at some point.
Typo. My mistake. Corrected.Maybe it would be worth more if it were a Beatles album?
Just giving you grief for the fun of it!Typo. My mistake. Corrected.
I'm really not an enthusiast. I'd say 99% of my music listening is on Spotify. Its mostly production at this point.VHS is "analog" and thus has better picture quality than Blu-Rays, which are digital.
^That's the logic of so many vinyl enthusiasts.
Glad you did! I've probably made that mistake before without knowing it. Old guy syndrome.Just giving you grief for the fun of it!![]()
Really it has more to do with production than anything else.
Glad you did! I've probably made that mistake before without knowing it. Old guy syndrome.
I'm really not an enthusiast. I'd say 99% of my music listening is on Spotify. Its mostly production at this point.
It's a pet peeve/personal issue for me. My career was in digital audio/video.
Not sure I agree with this. I've heard many musicians state their preference of analog sound over digital. It's 'fuller' and the overtones/resonant frequencies/harmonics of instruments get lost when it's a 1 or a zero.Yeah, mostly true, sort of. Digital is the superior medium compared to vinyl in all aspects, but yes, there are cases where the digital master is ruined by over-compression and/or too much bad eq.
Not sure I agree with this. I've heard many musicians state their preference of analog sound over digital. It's 'fuller' and the overtones/resonant frequencies/harmonics of instruments get lost when it's a 1 or a zero.
Most guitar players prefer tube amps (analog) over solid state (digital) for the same reasons. Digital definitely has its advantages but superior in all aspects is a stretch, imo. Might just be opinion either way though. I'm not a sound engineer.
Jeez Beave. Settle down. It's just a matter of preference. Can you really get into anyone's ears and hear what they hear? No real clear cut answer as to what is best. Enjoy the music!1. Most musicians don't know jacksh!t about the technology they use and don't understand digital. They just parrot what other musicians say. Neil Young is a prime example, but there are countless others.
2. Most rock musicians have hearing damage.
3. Personal preference for one technology over the other is not the same as debating the technical merits of one tech vs the other.
4. Musicians might prefer gear they grew up with, or gear that the musicians that influenced them used back in the 60s/70s/80s.
5. Analog is only "fuller" in the sense that the highs are sometimes rolled off - due to technical limitations of analog, not intentionally.
6. 'overtones/resonant frequencies/harmonics of instruments get lost when it's a 1 or a zero' makes no sense whatsoever and shows that you are also just parroting stuff you've heard or read without understanding it at all. Analog waveforms are captured in analog recording AND in digital recordings. Then they are somehow stored (digitally or in an analog format), processed (digitally or in analog), and ultimately played back. If digital, the final step is a conversion *back* to an analog waveform.
7. 'Guitar players preferring tube amps (analog) over solid state (digital)' makes no sense either. Both are analog. It's tubes vs. transistors, both of which are analog, not one analog and one digital. And that preference is about *creating* a sound, not recording it, processing it, and reproducing it. When *creating* a sound, accuracy isn't a concern. Distortion is often wanted to create a unique sound. Tubes create different distortion characteristics than does solid state. Sometimes that's desired to create a certain 'tone' or 'timbre' from the instrument.
But when *re-creating* a sound via recording and playback, distortion is now *un*wanted.
-tube amps are "warmer" and more dynamic/reactive to how one plays the guitar. Solid state is fine for clean tones...the Roland jazz chorus amps are classics for a reason. The way each "clips" is different..beav can certainly explain that in more detail.
-as far as media digital is probably better...but there is absolutely something to the process/act of playing a vinyl record. It's a helluva a lot more satisfying than pushing a button on your phone/cpu/device. Cover art/liner notes and such.