What do you got? So far form me Dylan (old Dylan), and the Beatles.
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What do you got? So far form me Dylan (old Dylan), and the Beatles.
Live at the Fillmore East
Dark Side of the Moon
Let It Flow
Led Zeppelin I
John Barleycorn Must Die
Everybody Knows This is Nowhere
Harvest
Any '70s Steely Dan
Any Steve Miller
CCR
Basically, anything you like from the '60s and '70s that was mastered in analog and you've only heard on CD or other digital media.
Make sure you buy in decent shape and clean them with something like thishttp://www.spincleanrecordwasher.com/
Santana Abraxas - unbelievably better sound than the digital remaster.
Ha. Ha... I'm doing it backwards, I think. Just digitized all those albums, and the Doors, Absolutely Live
This is a stupid thread.
[Insert favorite album recorded pre-digital]
Anything in quadraphonic, maaaaaaaaaaan
In general vinyl sounds better because of better/more headroom. Pre digital vinyl could still suck if they happened to compress the living shit out of it like almost all modern music.
I love everything written in this thread!
Genesis - Lamb Lies Down On Broadway
Lou Reed - "Metal Machine Music" -- especially disc two, where you can really appreciate the subtleties of the compositions when played back on vinyl.
Or...
Listening on vinyl is a difference experience from listening to digital, not just because of sound quality issues.
There was something more to sequencing an album when there were multiple sides. For instance, the second side of "Abbey Road". Multi-disc releases add even more complexity to the sequencing equation, since there are more opportunities to group things. There's something "involved" about getting up to flip the record, and sitting back down for side 2. It makes you more conscious of the structure. I think it also made listening to music a more active activity, and less of a background noise generator.
The digital version of albums, first on CDs, and even moreso on MP3 players, take away the obvious breaks between sides, and can blur together some of the thematic goals set by the artist. This isn't a necessarily a problem for single-heavy, radio-focused music where no track has any connection to any other track, but for "concept albums", it's an important element.
None of that, of course, addresses the differences in sound quality or "warmth" or whatever. Given the choice, I'll take good vinyl on a good system, any day, over the digital counterpart.
My own favorite thing to listen to on vinyl is my parents' copy of Nat King Cole's Christmas Album ("The Christmas Song"), because it sounds like my Christmas memories for as far back as I can remember. The cracks and pops are right where I expect them, and it's a very personal thing - like an aural analogue to my grandmother's cooking. Is it a great album to listen to on vinyl in an absolute sense? No idea.
Jesus freakin christ people. you listen to vnyl so you'll have something to clean the seeds on. Like. Duh.
El Chup.: Good call. I couldn't even imagine listening to the White Light White Heat album (especially "The Gift") digitallized. I will change that to my numero uno
....fuck..... Phil Collins no longer retired
Look what you've done now.
I would say that I prefer most albums on vinyl and purchase new music as well on vinyl, Tame Impala is good.
Pink Floyd -Wish You Were Here, comes to mind as being exceptional on vinyl
-but what makes a bigger difference imo is the pre amp, amp, and speakers, I have a Carver C-4000 with Sonic Holography and tied to a monster Carver amp and Acoustic Research ar10pi speakers.
Sonic Holography is fucking crazy, it sounds like the music is inside your head!
-there are some awesome videos on youtube of Bob Carver describing it from the early 80's
If you are going to listen to music from 30+ years ago I think it sounds best on gear from the same era
-but that's like my opinion man, yours may be different
Just got back from a weekend of Tide football in Tuscaloosa,AL.
Friend of a friend owns a brewery, and all they have is a record player with a huge bin of records. You pick the record, and the bartender throws it on. It sounded amazing. Led Zep III was the winner though. I haven't listened to that album in so long.
Totally made me want to break out my record player and break out the bin of about 40 records that I own. I am also growing out my beard, buying a beanie to wear on the hottest days, and stocking up on ironic T's and skinny jeans. Gateway drug.
You're forgetting that vinyl is hip as fuck again, there are plenty of artists that record on tape these days
this sounds yummy on vinyl, a lot jazz instrumentals between the hip hop. Herbie Hancock is currently working with him on a collab album.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=k4Oz8UmUXbg
My old man has a Stephen Stills, Al Kooper, and mike Bloomfield: super session. The album is amazing. Dark side, Zep 1-4,
Basically my iPod... :)
So I really am digitizing my albums, saving money and so I can have them in the car. Using "Audacity" software and a turntable with a USB output. Is this sacrilegious or will it actually be my vinyl, but through Apple device... anyone know?