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#1
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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I used to follow this ng religiously in 1997, but stopped for ten
years due to other interests. I am curious if the status of vinyl/ analog has decreased or increased since 1997? There was a small renaiscance in the late 1990's with several companys producing remastered vinyl discs. Is this all dead or still alive? |
#2
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article . com,
wrote: I used to follow this ng religiously in 1997, but stopped for ten years due to other interests. I am curious if the status of vinyl/ analog has decreased or increased since 1997? There was a small renaiscance in the late 1990's with several companys producing remastered vinyl discs. Is this all dead or still alive? http://www.becausesoundmatters.com/ |
#3
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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wrote in message
ups.com I used to follow this ng religiously in 1997, but stopped for ten years due to other interests. I am curious if the status of vinyl/ analog has decreased or increased since 1997? There was a small renaiscance in the late 1990's with several companys producing remastered vinyl discs. Is this all dead or still alive? Vinyl was pretty strong up until a few years ago, bouyed by an odd combination of dance music DJs and sentimental audiophiles. Vinyl was attractive to the DJs because it enabled scratching, a process that plays LPs by means of hand movements instead of normal steady rotation and groove tracking. Eventually, effective digital simulations of scratching became popular, and the dance music market is now going away. Vinyl media sales fell precipitously in the last half of 2006, and can be expected to continue to drop. |
#4
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article ,
"Arny Krueger" wrote: wrote in message ups.com I used to follow this ng religiously in 1997, but stopped for ten years due to other interests. I am curious if the status of vinyl/ analog has decreased or increased since 1997? There was a small renaiscance in the late 1990's with several companys producing remastered vinyl discs. Is this all dead or still alive? Vinyl was pretty strong up until a few years ago, bouyed by an odd combination of dance music DJs and sentimental audiophiles. And people who really like how some of them sound. Vinyl was attractive to the DJs because it enabled scratching, a process that plays LPs by means of hand movements instead of normal steady rotation and groove tracking. Eventually, effective digital simulations of scratching became popular, and the dance music market is now going away. Vinyl media sales fell precipitously in the last half of 2006, and can be expected to continue to drop. As did and as can CD sales. |
#5
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article jennconductsREMOVETHIS-A0D9B1.08054127042007
@newsclstr02.news.prodigy.com, says... In article , "Arny Krueger" wrote: [...] Vinyl media sales fell precipitously in the last half of 2006, and can be expected to continue to drop. As did and as can CD sales. Yeah, I think that sales of all forms of physical media are going to continue to suffer. There's no question that vinyl is a small niche, but at least locally it's one that appears to be doing quite well. And I think vinyl will survive as an audiophile niche product. I wouldn't be at all surprised if vinyl outlives redbook CD! -- Bill |
#6
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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![]() Bill Riel said: As did and as can CD sales. Yeah, I think that sales of all forms of physical media are going to continue to suffer. Krooger's kockeyed notion of his own self-worth is inextricably tied to spouting off about the horrors of vinyl. Surely you don't suffer from the same disease? -- Krooscience: The antidote to education, experience, and excellence. |
#7
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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In article , George M.
Middius cmndr _ george @ comcast . net says... Bill Riel said: As did and as can CD sales. Yeah, I think that sales of all forms of physical media are going to continue to suffer. Krooger's kockeyed notion of his own self-worth is inextricably tied to spouting off about the horrors of vinyl. Surely you don't suffer from the same disease? Heh, actually I *love* vinyl! Every time I have a work trip to a new town I check out local record shops and almost always return with something interesting. I certainly buy CDs too, but most of those I get on-line. I'm fortunate to have several record stores in my home town which seem to get new vinyl inventory on a regular basis. Global sales aside, vinyl appears to be thriving locally. -- Bill |
#8
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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http://www.audioasylum.com/audio/vinyl/bbs.html
wrote in message ups.com... I used to follow this ng religiously in 1997, but stopped for ten years due to other interests. I am curious if the status of vinyl/ analog has decreased or increased since 1997? There was a small renaiscance in the late 1990's with several companys producing remastered vinyl discs. Is this all dead or still alive? |
#9
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Posted to rec.audio.opinion
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On Fri, 27 Apr 2007 06:49:25 -0400, Arny Krueger wrote:
wrote in message ups.com [quoted text muted] Vinyl was pretty strong up until a few years ago, bouyed by an odd combination of dance music DJs and sentimental audiophiles. Vinyl was attractive to the DJs because it enabled scratching, a process that plays LPs by means of hand movements instead of normal steady rotation and groove tracking. Eventually, effective digital simulations of scratching became popular, and the dance music market is now going away. Vinyl media sales fell precipitously in the last half of 2006, and can be expected to continue to drop. Unfortunately it is being replaced by something even worse, lossy over-compressed mp3's played through cheap earbuds. |
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