Vinyl had a very long run as the standalone medium without many contenders barking behind it. (I'm talking populist application here, not necessarily audiophile) I started on 45rpm singles, graduated to 33 1/3, had an 8 track followed by a cassette deck in my cars, then a reel to reel in my home, onto the compact disc. Whew. Long trip.
At the end of all this, this long and winding road, I must admit that my preferred medium is...(drum roll, please) the compact disc. (Ducking, cowering..)
I have spent as much on vinyl equipment as I have on disc, so I've been fair to either medium over the years. Fact of the matter is that either medium, as well as all of the associated equipment required to listen to both are...one and the same thing, artificial reproductions of musical information. Period.
I have never in my life listened to an audio system that made me think the sound was live. Never. Never will, either; and I have spent some enviable coin over the years on my various setups.
Vinyl to me now is more of a priveleged allocation of time, very amusing when a youngster's around and sees a turntable for the first time. I'm 59 so "youngster" is a fairly broad spectrum...
It's been a very long time since I've hosted a party and heard someone changing an LP while I was out of the room. We all remember THAT sound, don't we?
My preference for the CD, or even downloaded music, is derived from the simplicity of playback, of care, of maintenance. I have what I think is pretty good equipment for playback so I'm quite doubtful I'm missing anything audible; what's a few hertz here or there between friends, aye?
The youngsters I referred to earlier barely know what a compact disc is. I was rather surprised to be shopping in an office supply store last week when I spotted blank CD's for sale. Even I thought that was passè by this point. Even for business purposes alone. Sheesh.
I'm not letting go of my vinyl or turntable, nor my CD transport, DAC. Both have their place in my system, in my life, both also give me something tangible to physically appreciate unlike downloaded music. The medium, the message, the listener. Tin ears, golden ears.
Good forum. Holiday cheers to all.
At the end of all this, this long and winding road, I must admit that my preferred medium is...(drum roll, please) the compact disc. (Ducking, cowering..)
I have spent as much on vinyl equipment as I have on disc, so I've been fair to either medium over the years. Fact of the matter is that either medium, as well as all of the associated equipment required to listen to both are...one and the same thing, artificial reproductions of musical information. Period.
I have never in my life listened to an audio system that made me think the sound was live. Never. Never will, either; and I have spent some enviable coin over the years on my various setups.
Vinyl to me now is more of a priveleged allocation of time, very amusing when a youngster's around and sees a turntable for the first time. I'm 59 so "youngster" is a fairly broad spectrum...
It's been a very long time since I've hosted a party and heard someone changing an LP while I was out of the room. We all remember THAT sound, don't we?
My preference for the CD, or even downloaded music, is derived from the simplicity of playback, of care, of maintenance. I have what I think is pretty good equipment for playback so I'm quite doubtful I'm missing anything audible; what's a few hertz here or there between friends, aye?
The youngsters I referred to earlier barely know what a compact disc is. I was rather surprised to be shopping in an office supply store last week when I spotted blank CD's for sale. Even I thought that was passè by this point. Even for business purposes alone. Sheesh.
I'm not letting go of my vinyl or turntable, nor my CD transport, DAC. Both have their place in my system, in my life, both also give me something tangible to physically appreciate unlike downloaded music. The medium, the message, the listener. Tin ears, golden ears.
Good forum. Holiday cheers to all.

