Vinyl anyone?

Violinschlüssel

New member
Are there any others out there who have kept some vinyl albums to remember the good old days and what do you think you will hold onto come what may?
So what have you kept and which is your favourite vinyl album?

Me, me! :) I cannot but quote every word you say about vinyl albums. I'm such a nostalgic person, you know, and sometimes I miss those times in which I entered a music store and was soon surrounded by a sea of vinyl records. From those far and lucky times, I've kept a few vinyl albums, however, mainly because, actually, I own a turntable no more... which is a crying shame, but when, several years ago, mine broke, I had no money to it get it repaired, and so... But, in order to never forget the vinyl era, I kept Horner's Name Of The Rose score (which I'm very keen on keeping since, from a personal viewpoint, means much to me), a coupla Madonna's albums (I think Like A Virgin and The First Album), and a few more.
I loved vinyl. It had a special charm, with its smell, even though the sound was not perfect, even though it could get broken, even though...
Immortal vinyl! ;)
 

lyrica

New member
i recently inherrited about 60 records....ranging from 60s classics- mid 80s stuff.
Theres some great music there and I plan to get the majority of it transported on to mp3 and ipod. But would never part with the records, I
 

methodistgirl

New member
When I moved to another place a few times in the last ten years I've lost
almost every record I had in vinyl and cd's. Right now I can download
music on my computer so that I don't lose it again piece by piece. A lot
of it also got stolen through the years. So it's me, the computer, my
instruments, and the church hymnbook.
judy tooley:(
 

Mahlon

New member
my dad has a huge vinal collection, im thinking about trying to put some of them to digital cause they are some classic recordings
 

Mat

Sr. Regulator
Staff member
Sr. Regulator
Regulator
I also own some vinyl records. Actually I have some really good Polish jazz from the 50s and the 60s. I guess they could be quite valuable these days. Unfortunately, I don't have suitable equipment (what's the right word?) to play them...
 

marval

New member
We have quite a large collection of vinyl records, Including a lot of old jazz, my collection of classical, and my Beetles Sgt.Pepper album.

I hope to be able to transfer some to cd. Unfortunately some are a little sound weary, am not sure how they will come out. My Chopin piano music played by Ashkenazay, sadly is acratched. I think it will have to be replaced if I can get it.


Margaret
 

Krummhorn

Administrator
Staff member
ADMINISTRATOR
Hi Margaret,

Some of the A to D software that comes with such turntables may remove some of the unwanted pops, clicks and other extraneous noises. I'm still in the process of evaluating different A to D turntables as I have a few hundred LP's that I want to convert to CD's if only for archiving purposes.

Note: A to D = Analog to Digital ... the process that converts an analog signal, as that from a phonograph recording, into a digital format on your PC hard drive.
 

NEB

New member
I've got quite a few LP's as well. To convert them at some stage would be nice especially if I can run noise suppression software over it before Saving to the HD. It's mostly 70's rock bands, but there are some classical gems in there too plus some complete operas including Otello, Aida, various Donizetti etc.
 

marval

New member
Hi Krummhorn

Thanks for your advice, I must make enquiries. I must give it a go. Some I will keep the LP's for sentimental reasons


Margaret
 

Fretless

Member
My record player finally gave out last summer. I have around 200 LPs. I don't think I've ever owned a really "nice" record player, but I used to at least take care of the LPs by cleaning and wiping them with a solution and lint wiper. This last player I inherited from a great-aunt and the needle was never changed and went through some rough times with being handled by my own very small children, so I don't think it was accurately playing the records very well in the end.

I put a lot of my collection onto CD by hooking up my record player to the "line-in" on my computer, playing records into it and recording them onto the hard drive with Soundforge. From there I could clean up a lot of the pops and scratches in the sound waves and burn them onto CD. I'm glad I was able to get a lot of them on CD, since my record player is now dead, but it just doesn't sound all that good, which I blame on a bad, worn-out needle and cheap record player.

Anyway, my local record shop still carries lots of vinyl releases, and I wish I could buy them, because in reality I still like records, and reading through this thread makes me realize that I really don't enjoy listening to my digitized transfers of my records. I miss "hanging out" by the record player with the covers and the inserts and the physical act of dropping the needle.

I have too many favorites to really mention, none of them stand out. But I still remember my first official LP purchases from my childhood:
First store bought:
Heavy Metal--Original Soundtrack (I bought this for the orchestra music, which wasn't included on the album :( )

First BMG Music Club ("Seven For A Penny!") haul:
Ghostbusters OST
Yes--90125 (still listen to this one 24 years later)
Survivor--Vital Signs (one of the only albums I've ever given away)
Quiet Riot--QR
Quiet Riot--Condition Critical
Chicago--17
Billy Squier--Signs of Life

Let me say that my musical tastes overall have improved since I was 12. :) I sometimes still pull out the Chicago album for my wife.
 

Muza

New member
My father also had a huge LP collection back at home (I had a collection of my own - but those were all children book/stories on LP :) ). Unfortunately we had to leave all of that behind when we were coming here.

But yeah, as someone else has mentioned in here, there is plenty of good stuff (and very very cheap I might add) in either little vintage stores or even big music stores, located in funky places (for instance, Rasputin store in Berkeley had a lot)... The problem with those, is that its so hard to get a good equipment for those...
 

drummergirlamie

New member
I love the sound of vinyl. I was born in 71 and Daddy always had some classic rock legend(s) on the turntable. You can still buy vinyl I found out just a few years back.
 

drummergirlamie

New member
So true ... vinyl is making a comeback and being produced again.

Wonder what the cost difference is between producing a LP album vs CD album?
I'm not certain myself, but I heard that was one of the bigger factors in reference to the transition. I guess it's considerably more expensive to make vinyl? Many will claim vinyl is better for pitch.
 

Corno Dolce

Admiral Honkenwheezenpooferspieler
Vinyl is better for pitch? Ummm, I don't think so...One might get a *warmer* sound from vinyl...I, for one, don't miss the clicks, pops, and scratches associated with vinyl.
 

drummergirlamie

New member
Vinyl is better for pitch? Ummm, I don't think so...One might get a *warmer* sound from vinyl...I, for one, don't miss the clicks, pops, and scratches associated with vinyl.
I know what your sayin'. I've never been sold entirely so have never fully subscribed, myself-but I've heard that verbal a good handfull of times. I guess there was a lil' somethin' special in growin' up when I did and witnessing all that change: Vinyl to cassette (with the abominal eight-track encroachment) and then to CD. Wow. I've asked Grandma (81 years not-so old) a few times as to what she thinks about the technological advances she's witnessed and somtimes she'll just smile and shake her head. Makes me feel like the spoiled-ass 21st.Century Digital Girl that I am. Haha. Hey, I got off on a lil' tangent. Sorry 'bout that. But vinyl did have it's own special little sound. Snap, Crackle n' Pop just brings back back memz for some of us wierdoz, I guess? :crazy:
 

John Watt

Member
I remember driving with a friend for over two hours to pick up the new C.D. of Robert Johnson when that was hype. Over $80 early 90's. When we got back my tech-talk friend played it and I couldn't hear the low E string. Not only could I play along with this missing part on his acoustic, but he could hear it on my vinyl L.P's, and they are remasters of original cellulose. You get tiny you sound tiny. Tiny artwork. Around here, grabbing an old Board of Education tape recorder is considered a scoop. Those big stereo tape machines with two mikes always sound great. If everyone put C.D. and vinyl and wide tapes side by side you would hear the depth difference. Ever see what's hauled into cinemas for real public entertainment?

At least back then everyone stood a chance with the same tech. But now, loading a C.D. is nukeUler science, and companies multiple E.Q. product to sound best on their various players and their broadcasters, making any chance of home recordings making it more negligible than ever, except for your wonderful opportunities for free uploading. I bummed out a lot of C.D. enthusiasts for years getting excited myself, saying let's make a C.D. when no user could. The public was held hosting hostage for years.

If I can add to the mild controversy here, how much of your home high-tech would have been illegal for you to own years ago, being C.I.A. secrets? Audio-video brainwashing, playback psychology, electronic invasion, user interfacing, variable identities: why is this such a good thing as your lifestyle? How has this lifestyle affected your economy? And as a musician, could you survive with online food recipes, C.D's of farm tours and watching cooks on T.V. instead of real food? Not only is it still Support Live Music, now it's Support Live Life. And as a famous global computer prophet said in the 60's, in the future you'll find out you have to pay for losing a war you didn't see, watching the news on T.V.

Personally, I still use my double cassette deck radio to grab tunes off air or off T.V. and make copies for band members. And I'm bad, taping over unpopular product sold cheaper than blanks, like The Best of Rimsky Korsikov by The Danish Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladamir Horowitz with The Deutsche Grammophone Symphony, The Twenty Top Sixties Hits of Motown, A Collection of Jazz Standards by The Original Artists, The Best of Bach on The Hawaiian Wanalotapipea Festival Organ by Cornola Dolcemo, and my own band tapes I don't like anymore.

Vinyl required care and maintenance to sound clean, not as much effort as learning to sing and play the music yourself. Ever hear L.P. noise from radio stations storing thousands? Why did the public's diamond needle quality deteriorate so badly? Not sound engineering, this social engineering.
 
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Till recently I owned close to 1,000 classical LP's here in London - many of them bought at sales over years. Can you imagine carrying them, or moving house with them ? LOL. My favourite was a great collection of Bach and the whole collection had records in different states of preservation. The oldest recordings I had came from 1907 and the most recent was in the late 1990's. Certainly, vinyl recordings played on a good direct drive turntable, with a high grade (valve) amplifier and a good cartridge/needle with good speakers produces a depth of sound, a warm resonance, that is often missing completely, even from sanitised C.D.'s. It can be amazing. And that, (to me and others) is a plain fact. Vinyl recordings are also far more numerous than C.D. recordings. Even vinyl mono recordings can sound tremendous.

The fact that vinyl records, turntables and valve amplifiers are still used by D.J.'s speaks for itself. Such sound quality can be truly marvellous. So if you win lots of money, or are left some by a rich aunt, get a vinyl record collection and a record player. You'll see !!!

Viva Vinyl !!!!

(Last refuge of vinyl classical recordings - London England - LOL !)
 
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I remember driving with a friend for over two hours to pick up the new C.D. of Robert Johnson when that was hype. Over $80 early 90's. When we got back my tech-talk friend played it and I couldn't hear the low E string. Not only could I play along with this missing part on his acoustic, but he could hear it on my vinyl L.P's, and they are remasters of original cellulose. You get tiny you sound tiny. Tiny artwork. Around here, grabbing an old Board of Education tape recorder is considered a scoop. Those big stereo tape machines with two mikes always sound great. If everyone put C.D. and vinyl and wide tapes side by side you would hear the depth difference. Ever see what's hauled into cinemas for real public entertainment?

At least back then everyone stood a chance with the same tech. But now, loading a C.D. is nukeUler science, and companies multiple E.Q. product to sound best on their various players and their broadcasters, making any chance of home recordings making it more negligible than ever, except for your wonderful opportunities for free uploading. I bummed out a lot of C.D. enthusiasts for years getting excited myself, saying let's make a C.D. when no user could. The public was held hosting hostage for years.

If I can add to the mild controversy here, how much of your home high-tech would have been illegal for you to own years ago, being C.I.A. secrets? Audio-video brainwashing, playback psychology, electronic invasion, user interfacing, variable identities: why is this such a good thing as your lifestyle? How has this lifestyle affected your economy? And as a musician, could you survive with online food recipes, C.D's of farm tours and watching cooks on T.V. instead of real food? Not only is it still Support Live Music, now it's Support Live Life. And as a famous global computer prophet said in the 60's, in the future you'll find out you have to pay for losing a war you didn't see, watching the news on T.V.

Personally, I still use my double cassette deck radio to grab tunes off air or off T.V. and make copies for band members. And I'm bad, taping over unpopular product sold cheaper than blanks, like The Best of Rimsky Korsikov by The Danish Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladamir Horowitz with The Deutsche Grammophone Symphony, The Twenty Top Sixties Hits of Motown, A Collection of Jazz Standards by The Original Artists, The Best of Bach on The Hawaiian Wanalotapipea Festival Organ by Cornola Dolcemo, and my own band tapes I don't like anymore.

Vinyl required care and maintenance to sound clean, not as much effort as learning to sing and play the music yourself. Ever hear L.P. noise from radio stations storing thousands? Why did the public's diamond needle quality deteriorate so badly? Not sound engineering, this social engineering.

Hi there John Watt,

Yes, I agree with a lot of this. The record player, vinyl records, turntables etc. were (together with the 'reel to reel' tape players) no doubt the greatest sound quality we have ever known. For some years it was trendy to like C.D.'s. Today we have little choice.

But, honest, listen to a great orchestra and you can hear that wonderful resonance of the sounds created between the players. A whole range of harmonics that are simply lost when we hear the same piece on C.D. The interaction between these instruments IS music. And it's lost on C.D's. time after time. I once challenged a friend on this subject and played him a symphony on vinyl against his C.D. recording. He was completely amazed.

The wonderful bass parts of vinyl recordings. The warmth of the music on these (analogue) recordings. Stolen from us by enforced digital technology, whose productions cut off many frequencies. I think music lovers should at least try to compare them. Record players win every time.

I am unashamedly analogue in this ''digital world'' !!!!!!!!!!!!!!! LOL

Regards
 
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drummergirlamie

New member
I remember driving with a friend for over two hours to pick up the new C.D. of Robert Johnson when that was hype. Over $80 early 90's. When we got back my tech-talk friend played it and I couldn't hear the low E string. Not only could I play along with this missing part on his acoustic, but he could hear it on my vinyl L.P's, and they are remasters of original cellulose. You get tiny you sound tiny. Tiny artwork. Around here, grabbing an old Board of Education tape recorder is considered a scoop. Those big stereo tape machines with two mikes always sound great. If everyone put C.D. and vinyl and wide tapes side by side you would hear the depth difference. Ever see what's hauled into cinemas for real public entertainment?

At least back then everyone stood a chance with the same tech. But now, loading a C.D. is nukeUler science, and companies multiple E.Q. product to sound best on their various players and their broadcasters, making any chance of home recordings making it more negligible than ever, except for your wonderful opportunities for free uploading. I bummed out a lot of C.D. enthusiasts for years getting excited myself, saying let's make a C.D. when no user could. The public was held hosting hostage for years.

If I can add to the mild controversy here, how much of your home high-tech would have been illegal for you to own years ago, being C.I.A. secrets? Audio-video brainwashing, playback psychology, electronic invasion, user interfacing, variable identities: why is this such a good thing as your lifestyle? How has this lifestyle affected your economy? And as a musician, could you survive with online food recipes, C.D's of farm tours and watching cooks on T.V. instead of real food? Not only is it still Support Live Music, now it's Support Live Life. And as a famous global computer prophet said in the 60's, in the future you'll find out you have to pay for losing a war you didn't see, watching the news on T.V.

Personally, I still use my double cassette deck radio to grab tunes off air or off T.V. and make copies for band members. And I'm bad, taping over unpopular product sold cheaper than blanks, like The Best of Rimsky Korsikov by The Danish Philharmonic Orchestra, Vladamir Horowitz with The Deutsche Grammophone Symphony, The Twenty Top Sixties Hits of Motown, A Collection of Jazz Standards by The Original Artists, The Best of Bach on The Hawaiian Wanalotapipea Festival Organ by Cornola Dolcemo, and my own band tapes I don't like anymore.

Vinyl required care and maintenance to sound clean, not as much effort as learning to sing and play the music yourself. Ever hear L.P. noise from radio stations storing thousands? Why did the public's diamond needle quality deteriorate so badly? Not sound engineering, this social engineering.
Didn't Rolling Stone rank Robert Johnson as the greatest ever? What little I've heard of the guy sounded great. I'm gonna hafta download some of his stuff.
 
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