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  2. With extra material?
  3. No. 408 from ZIM is mind blowing. Listening to the entire album on headphones is recommended.
  4. I messaged Joe Harley about this. He says they intend to get to this but didn’t specify a time frame.
  5. Looks sort of like the Bears playbook with Ben Johnson at the helm.
  6. Today
  7. I guess this is my idea of taking a break from football
  8. It’s a Christmas miracle!!!
  9. Mine is a 2-CD set. https://www.discogs.com/release/3818299-Woody-Herman-His-Orchestra-Blowin-Up-A-Storm-The-Columbia-Years-1945-47?srsltid=AfmBOoqbRbGN43mRvijFgZ1_XrLWLedpc4naVvtpaoCT4nfXpuuaDGGc
  10. This is your idea of taking a break from football?
  11. Underwhelmed is the understatement of the year.
  12. The Mosaic Hank Mobley 1963-1970 box set is now SOLD. The Mosaic Hank Mobley Fifties Sessions box set is still available. The Complete Blue Note Hank Mobley Fifties Sessions (6 CD, Mosaic (1998) All is in Near Mint (NM) condition - outer box, CDs, jewel cases, booklet https://www.discogs.com/release/5250366-Hank-Mobley-The-Complete-Blue-Note-Hank-Mobley-Fifties-Sessions $85 (+ $10 media mail shipping) U.S. shipping only. I can only ship on the weekend. Payment by pay pal friends/family
  13. Need a break from football
  14. It will be interesting to see what happens to physical media in the next decade or so. Nothing is fixed. What we have today for streaming could look very different in terms of content and pricing in future. If these large platforms ever introduce tiered pricing mixed with AI-artist development and promotion, some of their customer base could leave and go seeking physical media or other options. I just don't see it happening for CDs overall though. One needs a CD player, receiver and speakers to listen to them and younger millennials and gen z don't seem like the demographic that's going to go out of their way to get all of that going. Happy to be wrong on that.
  15. Both Mobley sets are still available. PM sent.
  16. Yesterday
  17. Every type of medium has its advantages.
  18. Kenny Burrell “Midnight Blue” Blue Note/Tower Records SACD This edition sounds very nice.
  19. I also burned disks of downloads at first, thinking of them as the long term backup for the files I was playing. But as my collection of ripped and downloaded files grew I moved toward a fully digital way of thinking and began backing up all my music to portable hard drives and lately multiple copies at more than one location of 1 TB micro sd cards. One advantage of this arrangement is I can instantly dial up any record I own on multiple devices and also instantly bring up photos of the album covers and booklets. This is particularly helpful in my case because visual disabilities make it near impossible for me to read most cd covers and booklets but I can read the photos when I blow them up on a good sized monitor.
  20. I don't like downloads, but am certainly not going back to vinyl, so have started buying them for items where CD's are either not available or priced in the stratosphere. But I'm so physical product-collector oriented that I actually burn the downloads to CD-R, print off copies of the front and back covers, stick them in a thinline jewel case, and store them on my shelves along with my CD's.
  21. Originally I didn't like downloads much and was particularly puzzled by the habit younger people have of downloading single songs. Having grown up on 78s, 45s, and albums the single download seemed like a step backward. Not to mention the loss of album front and back cover. I was also turned off after a while by mp3s. It's probably all in my head but I fancy I can tell the difference between cd quality (and better) and mp3s. But then a number of things changed my mind about downloads. First of all, I have a lot of cds and box sets and I'm having trouble storing it all. I live in a tiny cabin at the moment. They end up residing in a storage unit and I play the files ripped from them. Another thing that happened is the advent of widely available cd qual or better downloads and the simultaneous proliferation of music database sites such as Discogs, MusicBrainz, AllMusic, Internet Archive, etc. The discography and often photos of album covers is now available electronically and for free for most releases. So I was already listening to lossless files I ripped from my cds and keeping photos of their covers and booklets. It occurred to me that commercially available cd quality (and above) downloads combined with digital photos of the covers and booklets available online were exactly the same formats I was using at home! Why not just buy the cheaper downloads and quit storing hard copies in a storage unit?
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