GA Russell Posted yesterday at 07:04 PM Report Posted yesterday at 07:04 PM 1 hour ago, Stompin at the Savoy said: Not sure I follow your logic here. Yes, the fact that an album is available for streaming today does not ensure it will be available tomorrow. But if it is streaming, it's almost certainly also available for download too. Which makes it exactly the same as a cd: get it while you can because it may go out of print at any time. But everyone prefers a professionally made CD to a homemade CDr, right? Yes, you can put your download onto a portable hard drive, and then burn it whenever necessary; but I am not referring to people who would do that sort of thing. I am thinking of the typical adult who bought LPs before 1990 and CDs after. He has stopped buying CDs. And apparently (I'm guessing) he stopped buying CDs about the time that the BMG Record Club went out of business. Quote
JSngry Posted yesterday at 08:27 PM Report Posted yesterday at 08:27 PM 1 hour ago, GA Russell said: But everyone prefers a professionally made CD to a homemade CDr, right? Wrong? It depends. Quote
Dub Modal Posted 18 hours ago Report Posted 18 hours ago 13 hours ago, Kevin Bresnahan said: FWIW, the argument that today's younger music fans aren't willing to buy equipment and have an actual stereo setup doesn't hold water when you consider that they are also the generation that has supposedly caused a resurgence in LPs. I remember that report from a couple of years ago that cited half of LP buyers didn't have a turntable to play them on. Maybe that trend has changed a little since, but I'd be surprised if CDs ever catch back on domestically enough for a spike in demand for players. I'd be all for it, but seems like a long shot. Quote
Kevin Bresnahan Posted 9 hours ago Report Posted 9 hours ago 8 hours ago, Dub Modal said: I remember that report from a couple of years ago that cited half of LP buyers didn't have a turntable to play them on. Maybe that trend has changed a little since, but I'd be surprised if CDs ever catch back on domestically enough for a spike in demand for players. I'd be all for it, but seems like a long shot. I think you are right. I just saw a news report that stated (how they got the number, we'll never know) that 37% of young LP buyers are using them as art decorating their walls. Quote
Stonewall15 Posted 2 hours ago Author Report Posted 2 hours ago I still think the convenience of CDs and CDrs will enhance their comeback. They have no deterioration or noise like LPs, are portable enabling trading and require much smaller storage space. With a CD recorder any LP can be turned into a CDr and the LP can either be permanently stored or disposed of. One issue is that CDs and CDrs are great for listening to during driving but new cars do not offer players anymore. Quote
paulfromcamden Posted 1 hour ago Report Posted 1 hour ago 49 minutes ago, Stonewall15 said: I still think the convenience of CDs and CDrs will enhance their comeback. They have no deterioration or noise like LPs, are portable enabling trading and require much smaller storage space. With a CD recorder any LP can be turned into a CDr and the LP can either be permanently stored or disposed of. One issue is that CDs and CDrs are great for listening to during driving but new cars do not offer players anymore. CDRs certainly deteriorate. Not through use but the dyes aren't stable over the longterm. Quote
Daniel A Posted 25 minutes ago Report Posted 25 minutes ago (edited) Downloads were mentioned several times above, but streaming only once or twice. In this country, even among people with a strong interest in music (including jazz), streaming has virtually replaced both CDs and downloads since more than ten years. It's true that the albums of more obscure artists might come and go, or may never have been available on these platforms. But the availability of millions of albums for a fixed fee has caused "inflation" for digital music. It's just not something that people are prepared to pay that much for (which off course started already with the rise of downloading around the turn of the millenium). It seems as if this has also affected how many people look at the value of these albums/artists/tracks that come and go - it doesn't seem to bother them too much. Edited 22 minutes ago by Daniel A Quote
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.