Lately I am listening to more vinyl than digital. I have just found so much stuff in my 6000+ LP collection that I didn't know/forgot was there that I am feeling like my birthday and Christmas came all at once. It is hard to describe the excitement of discovering these gems. Just cannot tear myself away from my hifi! Complete happiness!
Do you buy new LP records?

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eBay is a convenient place to shop for used vinyl in good condition. I find new vinyl to be somewhat less of a value. You can buy it online but it's never as cheap as the CDnot that it necessarily should be, but when you're broke it's harder to keep the faith. Last time I checked, LPs offer "anti-piracy" in a way digital files do not. And the labels still don't care. Look at the discography on a typical artist's official site and often there's no mention of the LP you know was released. Capitol releases some new and some old titles on LP but characterizes everything as "Vault," as if new LPs aren't being made, aren't viable. A recent marketing disappointment: I had a great experience buying Everything that Happens, Will Happen Today online. You can get a lossless FLAC download. Who needs the CD? And I like the music. Months later, they now offer it on LP for $20. I might have splurged a few months ago, but not today after having already shelled out $10. Offer a discount to those that already bought? Nope.

I have bought a few records off and on and quit buying CDs a long time ago. I guess that with 400+LPs I don't really want to buy more. I would buy high resolution, non-compressed downloads but the market (catalog and price) is not there yet. Also, music listening is a solitary endeavor and I sort of like doing it with the family (or at work with headphones). I do buy DVDs. Oddly, that is satisfying. And I have found out that I listening and watching is a more enjoyable and engaging endeavor. I would really love to have video attached to the audio. Not necessarily MTV stuff, but stuff like static shots of the orchestra, or operas or just the musicians sitting around and playing the music. Oh! BTW, the state of US music sucks.

I actually have decided to stop or drastically reduce buying new vinyl. It is ridiculous to pay $25-35 for a record that has the surface noise of a $4 used copy. I gues I am boycotting till the vinyl pressing folks can assure quality and profit instead of just profit!

You should have included buying used LPs from a reseller. In our area we have a used record store that rates used LPs by condition and that is what determines the price. They all are between $4 and $8, unless it's an import. Just like whaen you could go to a record store. I haven't been for a while because it is 60 miles away. I hope he can stay in business. Technology can do some amazing things but, sometimes it's a case of "if it ain't broke don't fix it." The record companies pushed CD to be perfect sound and downloads promise convenience. All the LP promised was listening to the latest music from a very diverse range of artists. If this economic downturn shows anything, it's that getting back to basics is what is much more important than the latest gizmo or format. Just an idea. What if the recording industry just worked on finding new talent with unique music and getting it to the public? Nah!
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