Should i sell my turntables




















Take for example Tull - Aqualung album. First track side 2 - Cross Eyed Mary. I once had a room full of people in their 30's. I played a gold master CD version of it, then followed with the g vinyl. They all nearly fell out of their chairs! All jaws dropped, and people impressed who hate this kind of music.

Says it all really! For me, I'm Now I have the luxury of only buying the audiophile grade albums and I have to say I've been more than happy! Absolutely jazzcourier, I downloaded all my CDs to a hard drive and traded them in at Bullmoose Music for Records: I am so happy to be rid of those crappy plastic cases that crack and come apart with script on crappy paper that you can not read.

It rips when you slide it out anyway. The record jacket is art. Just ask Neon Park and you can actually read it. It is the right size for a human. The CD is for Lilliputians. Do Records sound better? Not always especially if Rykodisc is pressing them. I synced them up and played them for friend and everyone including myself preferred the Mofi version. It had a tube like euphoria to it that was probably not accurate but as Nelson Pass said, "Audiophiles do not care about accurate.

They just want to be happy. Shoot I buy new ones every week! I enjoy the clutter and have no plans to sell my collection. That said, if anyone wants to get rid of their collection get ahold of me. Yes it takes effort to stay on top of a vinyl collection. Dig them out, take them out of the cover, clean them, get out of the chair to flip it over, then put it back in its sleeve and finally Back on the shelf or in the box.

The good things in life take even more effort". My old vinyl collection actually got me back into the music listening hobby. Probably had about albums stored, never thought I would actually play them but couldn't turn loose.

A box came apart and as I was reboxing them started reading the titles, thinking how nice it would be to spin a few. Started researching the hobby on Audiogon, Audioholics etc. Told my wife it would be nice to have a stereo again after 30 years. Actually, had to get a new wife first. Did better the second time. How much better? For me the crucial part of the listening experience began with the new wife. I inherited from my father. If, on the other hand, I was facing current costs for audiophile-quality vinyl, I perhaps wouldn't continue as - compared to streaming services like Tidal - the cost:benefit ratio wouldn't favor LPs.

Having made that comment though, the entire vinyl "experience" seems to zero-out the "pain-in-the-ass" and cost factors. So, I'll stay in vinyl for the foreseeable future. Yes, I know! Most are in very good to excellent condition because, I recorded about 40 reels and cassettes from my favorite ones and mostly listened to them.

I went the CD route for a while and have to Wow, what a major difference in SQ. I also purchased a completely new rig with the G. The SQ is great. But I like the sound coming from my new TT the best.

So I plan to keep mine around. Whether it's to reduce clutter, desire to make some money, or to ditch vinyl in favor of some newer media are questions for an individual to ask.

CD's, media streaming, and all the other sources are tempting for all who favor the formats. Some recordings in the digital format can never reach the realism of a well recorded vinyl media. And, some of the original music recorded on vinyl and then transferred to digital sounds better. Just depends on what the quality of the original recording was. I donated about 1, albums 5 years ago when we moved; I certainly don't regret losing those. I kept about 2,, and my plan is to get down to about 1, before we move again.

Cookies You can set your cookie preferences using the toggles below. Condition Like with all technology, the condition is extremely important when determining the value of a record player. Equally, a record player in bad shape can easily damage your fragile vinyl records. Making sure the arm can turn freely on a record player is a basic check you can make to determine condition.

Don't knock design — many collectors will purchase a record player for its aesthetic. Create your free account today and explore our weekly auctions curated by our team of experts. Do you have a Catawiki account? Sign in. What were once decentralized slates of products with varying functionality came to be dominated by a single brand.

Beats standardized the idea of high-quality headphones to the average consumer, just as the iPod standardized the idea of the high-storage MP3 player. They both established a new category of product to be consumed alongside the songs that artists churn out each year. Ironically, both Apple and Beats have taken a full turn away from electronics to software, through Apple Music.

Why not square the musical equation, and offer the best experience in both physical and digital listening formats, in the home and on the go? Labels will only share in the incentive. Vinyl is more expensive to produce, but is worth more per unit to artists and labels than a Vevo stream, and is almost entirely impractical to pirate—unlike CDs, which beg to be ripped of their digital contents immediately, and lose most of their tangible value afterwards.

Get a few cheap belt driven ones with timecoded vinyl so you can use pirated software to mix and scratch mp3s. You can also use timecoded vinyls such as ms. DJing with decks is actually fun and fundamentally different to DJing with ableton live or whatever.

Having turntables and listening to music on vinyl is cool. Even though its way more convenient to listen to a big playlist of all your digitised records etc.



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