CDs just don’t have that “collector’s item” characteristic (yet?). Physical album sales are low enough nowadays that enthusiasts that are looking for a specific medium probably make up a very large portion of the buyers.
i gave up collecting physical music for space reasons but i have considered getting some LPs just for the large format album art. if nothing else they’d be cool to frame and display. CDs will never have that, they’re just going to go the way of the 8 track.
My thoughts exactly. Love the art, love the exclusives like posters. Personally I find the audio quality worse (although this is likely my cat's fault), but still love the format.
That being said, I have mostly backed out of buying vinyl after acquiring a small collection.
I feel this! I have moved so many times in my life. I have given away so many "collections" of things. Music used to be obsessively dear to me. Now, I have sort of just let it slide. Not because I am depressed, but because other things in life have slid into more importance. I suppose also because owning music takes up space, time and money that can be redirected elsewhere or gets lost in the mix. But nowadays making a digital collection can be a shady mistress too, because it seems like owning anything nowadays is a ridiculously tough task. It's a lot of renting. Or being locked into certain "environments." Or having to give assholes like Amazon money, cause fuck Amazon!
But I thought about it the other day, when I was gallivanting around one of the last mom and pop thrift stores in the US (hot damn so many have closed down ;_;!). I saw a whole lotta records, and my little brain bin lit up like a pinball machine. But I realized if I were to grab a slew of these little plastic discs, somehow grabbed some kind of jank box of a record player and sat around with these guys for a minute listening to them - that I'd probably have to just give them away next big move I've got. It's just not worth the effort anymore. Too bad listening to music on youtube has been stinking for a while now too. My latest trick is type in x-mix or x-instrumental and just letting it go. And looking for the least jank generic channel that doesn't look like it's funding some asshole in some country who's politics I don't particularly love. It's an uphill battle, but dungeoncore has been keep me a float lately. I pray I've got something else that can do it in the future =P!
THAT IS TO SAY IF ANYONE WANTS TO TOSS SOME RECOMMENDATIONS THIS WAY I WILL GLADLY TAKE A LISTEN!
It's more that a CD is just a physical copy of a digital file. Buying a CD and buying a mp3 file are basically the same. People buy records because they have this idea that "analog sounds better"(despite modern record players being digital as well - it's the tubes, not just the record, that made it analog)
I'm convinced that "analog sounds better" is just an inaccurate way people describe preferring the experience of listening to a record, and they just can't articulate that what they really like is the tactile ceremony of loading it in the player or looking at large-format album art or something like that. Surely nobody actually believes that less accurate sound reproduction is somehow an improvement.
CDs sounds much better than most mp3. I mean you can get mostly lossless compression that is worth using but CDs are just awesome and still likely to be the OG source.
Records often do sound better. This is a case of garbage in garbage out though - records cannot handle some of the tricks done in mastering to make CDs/digital sound okay on a car radio (that is against road noise), from a phone (tiny speakers) and all the other awful listening environments most people listen to music (a cynic would call this background noise with lyrics not music). So if you want to make a record you have to master it without those tricks and this makes for better music. People who listen to records also generally are listening in a better listening environment. If you can get a CD mastered for a great listening environment and listen to in a great listening environment it would be better than a record could ever be - but you can't get a CD mastered like that and even if you could most people are not listening in a great environment and so the CD will sound worse than one mastered as they are.
Used CDs are a hidden gem, IMO. They last longer than vinyls, they're cheaper, smaller, far easier to store/transport, and the music files on them are lossless so they can be ripped onto a computer and shared with no drop in quality.
As someone with a record collection, I wouldn't say that any format of music is better. I do think however that different formats let you hear the same music in different ways. So if you really love an album, it's cool when you notice things you never did before because you listened to it through a different medium.
I think it's the deliberate-ness that I love about it. When you put a record on, you're listening to that album. No shuffle, no skip, no casual earbuds. You're sitting in a chair and listening.
CDs are just digital files. Vinyl can sound different day to day, year to year. It degrades over time. It's sort of like a sense of respect. You listen to it because you really want to. There's effort involved. And if you really like an album, it'll show.
It just occurred to me the only functioning CD player I have at this point may be the one in the car, while I do have a USB-equipped turntable in the closet someplace. Afaik it still functions. I had bought it in order to burn my vinyl collection to CD.