billy g Wrote:
I wasn't sure where to post this but this seems like a good enough place. I'm wonder if people have rules or guidelines on when they buy vinyl vs cds or mp3 downloads. I finally got my turntable hooked up late last year and have been on a big vinyl buying kick. I think I've probably bought close to 150 lps this year vs 2 cds. Its mostly been stuff that either was very cheap or never issued on cd or is out of print/hard to find/expensive on cd. I'm still a little torn on portability/storage on lp vs cd/mp3 when both are available. I lean lp when its cheaper or when its an old album issued from analog masters and appears to be in good shape and is close to the same price. Storage is eventually going to become an issue though and while my listening habits have changed so that portability is less of an issue than it used to be, its still an issue. Also, there's the whole issue Neil Young recently raised about new vinyl recorded from digital masters not sounding better than cds. So for new recordings, is there any real reason to pay more for the vinyl? How do you guys decide what format you want?
CDs have lost a lot of value for me over the past few years, partly I guess because I have way too many, and partly because their perceived value everywhere has gone down. I'm under the impression that most cars won't be coming with CD players anymore before long. That said, there doesn't really seem to be a good portable non-streaming digital music option right now as the iPod classic is dead, and there doesn't seem to be a reasonable equivalent on the market. I still have my 160 GB classic, but I know it's days are probably numbered. iPod touches hold very little for how much they cost, and from what I've seen of the new Sony Walkmen, they're way overpriced.
So anyway, I've been buying digital the most, then vinyl, then CDs. I have really mixed feelings about vinyl, largely because of what you mentioned about the sound quality of most new vinyl not actually being very good. Even when they're mastered right from analog, a lot of the domestic pressing plants seem to do some pretty shoddy work. And the price of new vinyl has gone way up over the past 10 years. It used to be cheaper than CDs to get a new album on vinyl from one of the major indie labels like Sub Pop, Domino, etc., but now they are typically way more expensive. Somehow it's also been decided that there should never be more than 15 minutes of music per side so a typical 45-minute album gets pressed on two pieces of vinyl. The last Flying Lotus album was a double LP, and it's only 38 minutes long.
Sometimes vinyl is really reasonable, though, and then it's a no-brainer. The self-titled Viet Cong album was like $15 on white vinyl. Anytime a new album that I want is under $18 on vinyl, I will typically grab it, but I guess that there aren't that many new things I feel like I need to own a physical copy of anymore. Nowadays I'll download most everything (paid usually, through emusic, Bandcamp, Amazon, or occasionally iTunes), and after I've had a chance to really digest it and decide what I like most, I'll start getting my favorites from a given year on vinyl if I can find them for a reasonable price. It's rare that I'll buy something on vinyl when it comes out before I've had a chance to listen to it first for a while.
And I've gotten pretty averse to buying reissues of older albums that can still be gotten in decent condition for not too much money on eBay or a used record bin. A lot of the reissues seem to be made from digital masters.