TIrwin24 wrote:For my birthday a few weeks ago, I was the lucky recipient of a brand new turntable! I've been planning for a long time to begin an awesome record collection and now the time has come to begin what I foresee to be a potentially expensive and fun hobby.
So what say you BN? What are your favorite albums of all time?
I'll begin: (To name a few)
The Eagles - Hotel California
Matchbox 20 - Yourself or Someone Like You (so far this album is fetching around $275 on ebay)
Marshall Tucker Band - Carolina Dreams
Geez, usually if a wife wants to get rid of her husband she doesn't also want to get rid of all of his money as well. I mean congratulations on your new all-consuming hobby. I have been into vinyl for about four years now, and I can tell you that my record collection is nowhere near large enough.
My thoughts on vinyl. It is amazing to me that head to head vinyl sounds so much better than mp3's. It isn't even close, you get a rich sound out of vinyl that just doesn't come out of the cheap downloads, and I like the crackles. I do believe that Neil Youngs' PONO (or something similar) might someday compete well with vinyl, but we were fools to think that we could actually get something worthwhile for nothing, or almost next to nothing. I still have music on my phone, but it pales in comparison to what comes out of the turntable.
One thing about vinyl that is worth considering is that you don't want to buy a record of bad music just to get that one song that you do like. Time was, I would buy a record just for a song, but if I want to listen to it on vinyl I want the whole record to be worth listening to. It is something to consider.
New vinyl is amazing. The records being made today are 180g vinyl and are much better quality than the records that were made when I was a kid. The sound is better and they are much sturdier. It is worthwhile to get new music on vinyl.
If you take the time to go through the cheap stacks (Hastings has large cheap stacks) you won't really find all that much worthwhile, but rather will just see the same Herb Alpert, Barbara Streisand, and Poco records over and over again. I remember when every household had Johnny Cash at Folsom Prison, but good luck finding that record anywhere now. You will really see which records have stood the test of time, and which ones are as popular now as they ever were. By the way, you will find plenty of Hotel California, but in case you don't I have a copy that I would love to sneak out of the house while my wife is not looking.
I decided early on that I was not in it for record collecting ... I didn't care to have a valuable album that I couldn't play. I have this sealed Echo & the Bunnymen album, but damned if I know what to do with it. I got it for two bucks, so I am sure I could make money off of it, but it probably isn't worth so much that I shouldn't just play it. Oh well. On the flip side I have this REM record from 1981 -- Chronic Town --that has water damage on the cover basically it stuck to the record next to it. But it plays just fine, so I am totally happy with it. Sure it would be better with the cool gargoyle picture, but it works.
Have fun.
Edited to add:
Frank's Wild Years by Tom Waits.