Speaking of vinyl...
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Jolly - depends on what you want to do. Up here, with just a little patience - one can find decent receivers for $20-$50 that sold for $300-$500 new a while back. Same thing with speakers.
I think I told the story of a very devout woman who asked me to put together a system for her. I asked her budget. She said "$100." A day or so later, she said she'd changed her mind. In any event I found a receiver for $15 at a garage sale - nice one. I got a CD player for free - and speakers were found next to the garbage at a high rise. So for $15 which I didn't charge her for, she had a "system." She's used it for the past 25 years.
Now, if you want to connect your phone to the receiver, there's some added expense - or if you want to convert your albums to digital, you'd need either a turntable with an A/D converter or a separate one. Frankly, I've not converted my phonograph albums to digital and don't plan to . Separate worlds for me.
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@Aqua-Letifer said in Speaking of vinyl...:
it seemed good enough.
And that, my friend, is exactly my point.
For most people it is good enough. I had a long conversation with a surgeon friend about this, and though he agreed that there is some signal degradation, the convenience of MP3 is "good enough."
And yeah, there are lossless formats that you can use.
And no, they're not the same as a vibrating piece of steel (or whatever) tracking a bumpy groove in a piece of vinyl. They're different.
But they're good enough.
De gustibus, man.
Just ask @kluurs , whose basement, with its literally thousands of CD's I've seen. And I use the term "literally" literally, not as in "wow."
Compared the record to the exact same song on Spotify and Apple Music. Vinyl's far better, even with the bluetooth compression.
Interesting. I wonder if you could compare CD to those other two formats.
I think streaming is a whole 'nother thing, though I may be wrong.
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@Catseye3 said in Speaking of vinyl...:
I'd guess what you end up buying and spending will depend on how you feel about those records.
Sometimes, not always. Some I'm listening to now I've not heard much before, spent nothing on them, and they're still a hell of a lot more fun than a CD or playlist.
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@George-K said in Speaking of vinyl...:
@Aqua-Letifer said in Speaking of vinyl...:
De gustibus, man.
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There is a difference but it isn't always the medium. I have recording of a piano concerto on LP and CD. The LP is clearly superior - but as to why? When they went back to the master tapes to produce the CD, the person doing the mastering has likely a different person doing the mastering with a different intention.
I have some recordings where I have master quality recording - but yeah - can one really hear the difference. I can when listening through high end headphones. On the other hand, I listen to a lot of music in our kitchen using an Amazon Echo 8. It's wonderful as I can ask Alexa to play anything - and she does. Sounds great - no fuss.
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@George-K said in Speaking of vinyl...:
@kluurs said in Speaking of vinyl...:
the person doing the mastering has likely a different person doing the mastering with a different intention.
Interesting.
So...it's a crapshoot, and you probably won't know what you get.
Not until you listen to it. Even then, sometimes it's obvious, sometimes it's slight, sometimes it's
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@kluurs said in Speaking of vinyl...:
Jolly - depends on what you want to do. Up here, with just a little patience - one can find decent receivers for $20-$50 that sold for $300-$500 new a while back. Same thing with speakers.
I think I told the story of a very devout woman who asked me to put together a system for her. I asked her budget. She said "$100." A day or so later, she said she'd changed her mind. In any event I found a receiver for $15 at a garage sale - nice one. I got a CD player for free - and speakers were found next to the garbage at a high rise. So for $15 which I didn't charge her for, she had a "system." She's used it for the past 25 years.
Now, if you want to connect your phone to the receiver, there's some added expense - or if you want to convert your albums to digital, you'd need either a turntable with an A/D converter or a separate one. Frankly, I've not converted my phonograph albums to digital and don't plan to . Separate worlds for me.
Sam Bennett once told me I lived in a piano desert. There's more used pianos here than used audio equipment.
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What Kluurs wrote.
Depends on your listening habits. Vinyl’s great so long as you have a system that brings out its best.
I prefer digital. I don’t listen to music, I play music . Quality over speakers is not a big deal for me although the thirty some year old system I have is not at all shabby. I still keep my old Rega Planar 3 turntable in storage downstairs in case I want hook it up again someday. Hopefully the kid hasn’t shanked the needle and cartridge - although am sure the magnets in the cartridge are well beyond their best before date.