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Listening to vinyl and drunk is the best
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2021-03-09 at 3:11 AM UTCTurning the record
The sound of the needle drop
The warmth of the inferior analog medium
I could have done well in the late 70s and 80s -
2021-03-09 at 3:15 AM UTCFolks?
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2021-03-09 at 3:30 AM UTCcollecting vinyl mostly just takes too much space for me
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2021-03-09 at 3:40 AM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 4:52 AM UTCTrue vinyl fans do what they must
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2021-03-09 at 11:03 AM UTCtake that needle. take my hand. drop drop drop in it down..oh so gently..spin the black circle
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2021-03-09 at 12:10 PM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 1:41 PM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 1:47 PM UTCI've only owned 3 vinyls in my entire life and I'm 33. a municipal waste album, an agoraphobic nosebleed split, and jeff lorber fusion
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2021-03-09 at 2:01 PM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 2:01 PM UTCHiki only has a 12'x15' room and he manages to collect some.
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2021-03-09 at 2:13 PM UTC
Originally posted by Hentai master 2002 Turning the record
The sound of the needle drop
The warmth of the inferior analog medium
I could have done well in the late 70s and 80s
The warmth of the inferior analog medium. I like that. but its inferior because of the drag/pull sequence in which it starts off slightly slower than norm speed and speeds up a bit is part of it. on very mild dust (but not scratches) it has a comforting white noise of the mild static clicks. so yeah for someone like myself who lived in the last of the analog generation of the 70s and 80s in my teens and being a music lover there is true nostalgia but its also nice to hear mellennial fuckers say they like it as well.
but there were times in the analog days were you yelled ¨FUCK One of these days albums wont scratch so fucking easy¨ and the honest truth was cassetts didnt have the dynamic audio structure. it wasnt high enough in the hrz range to fill a room up with broad sound like an album could. and they got warmed and the sound got muddied. I dont know whats worse.
8 tracks in the 70s were awesome. they had nearly the studio quality but when they hit the end of the track, often the best songs would dim out, you would hear the mechanical click and then it would come back. this is why it didn´t last more than 5-8 years on the market. maybe longer but no one bought them. only certain albums that could manage to stick only the shitty songs on the track changeout.
it was fun times if more people were into working with the problems we had back then. but the sad truth was all of the drugs in western culture were the wrong kind to stir creative works in mechanics yet worked great in art. music, paintings, film making etc. but that part of the brain was more abstract. with mechanics you need to be very precise and abstract is just a pile of wires and components sitting on a fucking lab bench. -
2021-03-09 at 2:16 PM UTCur not interesting enuff for anyone to read that.
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2021-03-09 at 2:20 PM UTC
Originally posted by Bill Krozby I've only owned 3 vinyls in my entire life and I'm 33. a municipal waste album, an agoraphobic nosebleed split, and jeff lorber fusion
Uhh you know what. they do stamp out new vinyl these days. many record stores have 2021 prints of albums (or 2020 since the corona fucking shut down most of these plants. maybe even 2019)
people love the nostalgic quality even on new music. I didnt know this until a few years ago when I saw Morrissey and a few other semi mod bands printed albums. CDs are shit. if you have a good ear, often you will hear a beat missing in digital format. it will like skip a certain beat most people dont hear. I caught it for the first time listening to a Rush CD and realized it did it more than once. like 1/32 of a beat in Peart´s percussion is cut out more often than it should of been. . then I noticed it with other bands like Led Zeppelin and a Cream CD I had. and some of them are only about 10 bucks. they cost less to stamp out than to print a CD and package it. -
2021-03-09 at 2:23 PM UTCALso playing wipeout on the ps3 while drunk. It feels like being in the matrix. Have you tried it hiki?
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2021-03-09 at 2:56 PM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 3:18 PM UTC
Originally posted by Ghost I have a bunch of vinyl and they just sit on top of a dresser. Imaging having to physically move your body to listen to music lmao fucking peasant
he needs all the cracks and snapples and pops though, its all about that shit bro! i bet he doesn't even watch sanford and son on cr-tv
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2021-03-09 at 3:21 PM UTC
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2021-03-09 at 3:34 PM UTC
Originally posted by Ebola Cola Uhh you know what. they do stamp out new vinyl these days. many record stores have 2021 prints of albums (or 2020 since the corona fucking shut down most of these plants. maybe even 2019)
people love the nostalgic quality even on new music. I didnt know this until a few years ago when I saw Morrissey and a few other semi mod bands printed albums. CDs are shit. if you have a good ear, often you will hear a beat missing in digital format. it will like skip a certain beat most people dont hear. I caught it for the first time listening to a Rush CD and realized it did it more than once. like 1/32 of a beat in Peart´s percussion is cut out more often than it should of been. . then I noticed it with other bands like Led Zeppelin and a Cream CD I had. and some of them are only about 10 bucks. they cost less to stamp out than to print a CD and package it.
wats creem -
2021-03-09 at 5:01 PM UTC