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Bring On The Vinyl Revolution
Britznbeatz ^ | July 2, 2017 | Lucy Lerner

Posted on 07/04/2017 7:56:12 AM PDT by Logicbox

Did you know research shows that an incredible 45% of music lovers have not felt comfortable asking for advice in a record store while 25% have chickened out entirely asking for a particular artist or record in a record store because they didn't feel it was cool enough and might be judged?

(Excerpt) Read more at britznbeatz.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Miscellaneous; Music/Entertainment
KEYWORDS: music; musicbusiness; vinylrevolution
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To: RegulatorCountry

I think of it as sounds that are filtered out of the mix used to create the vinyl stamper. I have snapseed on my phone/camera. I pretty much always tend to add “warmth” to my photos. I shoot a lot of the woods around my home and somehow it makes the woods look more natural. But my adding the warmth, though it makes the photo more pleasing to me, technically, I’m changing the raw colors that were faithfully picked up by the digital camera.

I think the same thing is going on with vinyl. It’s less realistic, but more pleasing.

I say that as a musician that listens to a lot of live music in small venues. I hi-fi never does all that good of a job until you get into tens of thousands of dollars, which I certainly can’t afford. So I like the “warmth” and added experiences vinyl gives me, as opposed to the simple reproduction of music that digital gives.


21 posted on 07/04/2017 8:29:53 AM PDT by robroys woman
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To: bagadonutz

I wore out two cassettes and bought the CD twice of The Cure Standing on the Beach. I never heard it on vinyl and I believe vinyl for most classic albums sound far superior even with pops and hiss.


22 posted on 07/04/2017 8:29:54 AM PDT by shanover (...To disarm the people is the best and most effectual way to enslave them.-S.Adams)
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To: Logicbox

Bump


23 posted on 07/04/2017 8:31:44 AM PDT by HanneyBean
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To: robroys woman

Years ago, when I lived in Southern California, there was an article in the Los Angeles Daily News (published in the San Fernando Valley) about a guy who worked in the sound department of one of the major movie/television studios.

He owned 100,000 vinyl record albums, and had them all in his rented home in Santa Monica.

The volume of records were so heavy that the floors were sagging.

That must have been an amazing collection, but I doubt if his landlord was pleased.

Personally, I have 1,000 - 2,000 vinyl albums.


24 posted on 07/04/2017 8:41:49 AM PDT by july4thfreedomfoundation ("You can't fix America without pissing off the people who broke it".....Bill Mitchell)
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To: robroys woman

Music is an aesthetic pursuit. If a given method of capturing that music is more pleasing then it is superior, seems simple to me. But, reality for the vast majority of music is digital due to considerations other than purely aesthetic.


25 posted on 07/04/2017 8:43:48 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: july4thfreedomfoundation

Yeah, it’s funny when you think about why they were originally called LP’s. They don’t compare to a digital library. And once you build up your collection, they can get rather heavy. :)

We moved to a relatively small house in rural KY. I actually rotate my collection between the shed and the house. Typically, only a couple hundred are in the house at any given time. Keeps my wife happy.


26 posted on 07/04/2017 8:44:22 AM PDT by robroys woman
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To: july4thfreedomfoundation

I have five Peaches crates full. Never bothered to count them but they’re pretty heavy.


27 posted on 07/04/2017 8:44:42 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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To: RegulatorCountry

True. And also, most people won’t notice the difference, other than the surface noise. And for any public performance of pre-recorded music, the only reason for using vinyl is to ensure the crowd knows it, adding a certain retro charm to what they are listening to.

I have three turntables. One of them is an Audio Technica clone of the Technics 1200 that has a built in phono pre-amp. I can use it to play music during the breaks for my bands. People get a kick out of it.


28 posted on 07/04/2017 8:47:10 AM PDT by robroys woman
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To: All

vinyl recordings are horrible. No highs, no lows, distortion with wear, phase shift from speed shifts, horrible pops and crackles.

They sounds ‘mellow’. Well that’s because it’s mush.

I have a recording studio in a spare room. Very few working musicians I know like vinyl.


29 posted on 07/04/2017 8:53:43 AM PDT by TheTimeOfMan (A time for peace and a time for war)
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To: Logicbox

Time for Mr. Atkinson to sell another grammophone...

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dSINO6MKtco&t=6s


30 posted on 07/04/2017 9:04:22 AM PDT by Moltke (Reasoning with a liberal is like watering a rock in the hope to grow a building)
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To: marron

It is a brutal business for the artists. You make no money from sales - most everyone steals it. You make no money from touring unless you are a REALLY big act. And some of us don’t want to tour.

So we record at home, release them on Amazon,iTunes, and CDBaby and don’t make enough to pay for the equipment.


31 posted on 07/04/2017 9:04:58 AM PDT by TheTimeOfMan (A time for peace and a time for war)
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To: bagadonutz

Bkmrk.


32 posted on 07/04/2017 9:21:32 AM PDT by RushIsMyTeddyBear
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To: PAR35

Ralph’s Records sells it all from vinyl, to tapes, to CDs.


33 posted on 07/04/2017 10:05:40 AM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: rey

Me, too! They are even heavier than the vinyls!


34 posted on 07/04/2017 10:07:14 AM PDT by originalbuckeye ("In a time of universal deceit, telling the truth is a revolutionary act." - George Orwell service T)
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To: robroys woman
Tube ampsare also regaining popularity. They run the gamut from DIY kits to units that cost several thousand bucks.
35 posted on 07/04/2017 10:17:12 AM PDT by Army Air Corps (Four Fried Chickens and a Coke)
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To: originalbuckeye

We are in the middle of a resurgence of interest in vynal. I would recommend recording everything you have to a lossless format like flac. Do NOT record to mp3. Then sell it all. It is truely a good time for it. I suspect that this interest may well wane, so it is probably the best time to extract your equity in it.


36 posted on 07/04/2017 10:19:33 AM PDT by zeugma (The Brownshirts have taken over American Universities.)
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To: RegulatorCountry

Most modern popular music is mixed according to how people listen to music today. Most people listen while also doing something else through earbuds or crap computer speakers or in the car. And they listen to it a song at a time, not albums. Everyone will sit through a 2 hour movie, not many will sit and listen to all of a 45 minute album. So most music gets mixed to be loud and in your face, so that one song you hear pops and gets noticed. The bands that record/mix music with vinyl in mind also sound really good on CDs.

I think the vinyl resurgence is great, although I haven’t switched from CDs.

Freegards


37 posted on 07/04/2017 10:27:47 AM PDT by Ransomed
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To: Army Air Corps

Real books are also regaining popularity. Fact is, regarding entertainment, the culture seems to be experiencing a bit of a backlash against “digital perfection”.

An exception would be television and photography, for the simple reasons of cost and dramatic quality improvement.

i.e. if the pinacle of the needle in groove technology was the 78 rpm record, this comeback would not be happening.


38 posted on 07/04/2017 10:27:56 AM PDT by robroys woman
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To: bagadonutz
vinyl records are the only growth sector in the music industry besides streaming, Going to a record store and schooling the hipster about good music is one of the reasons.

True, but vinyl will never have more than a small audience of audiophiles and trendy hipsters. It's not going to save the music industry and return it to the heady days of pre-2001 where everyone got rich.

39 posted on 07/04/2017 10:36:29 AM PDT by Drew68
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To: Ransomed

Vinyl is in my opinion superior for most musical listening but that doesn’t make it convenient for the majority of listening opportunities, true.


40 posted on 07/04/2017 10:44:31 AM PDT by RegulatorCountry
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