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Re: The CD Thread
I'll answer the OP'S question with a question.
Can anybody recommend a superior quality protective mylar sleeve to put my digipaks in? Also looking for mini-LP size. |
Re: The CD Thread
I still buy CD's.
I have so many MP3's that I imported into Itunes back in the day that cut off before the song is even over now, Itunes coverart disappearing on me all the time... Yeah, fuck digital music. |
Re: The CD Thread
Here's a nice little article on the subject from yesterday. Nothing we don't already know, but still an interesting read:
How the compact disc lost its shine |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by Michael Corvin
(Post 12491298)
:up: The record industry fucked themselves and deserved it.
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I think at this point, if they priced them at ten cents people wouldn't buy them.
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Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by hanshotfirst1138
(Post 12498304)
I think at this point, if they priced them at ten cents people wouldn't buy them.
I, personally, have more shelf-space for music than I do digital space. Also, it's a lot easier for me to pop a CD into my car's stereo, than it is to download a song onto a device, and plug it into my car to listen to. Not to mention, the CD sounds a billion times better. But I seem to be the only one who cares. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498313)
This is true, and it makes me sad.
I, personally, have more shelf-space for music than I do digital space. Also, it's a lot easier for me to pop a CD into my car's stereo, than it is to download a song onto a device, and plug it into my car to listen to. Not to mention, the CD sounds a billion times better. But I seem to be the only one who cares. The whole digital music thing is so opposite of how most people grew up listening to music before the turn of the century that it's ridiculous. I still read album credits, scan through the lyrics, check out the pictures, etc, in the booklet that comes with the CD. You can't do that with digital music. I have had such bad luck with computers - I've lost thousands of audio files that I've ripped from CD when my computers have taken a permanent dump. If I had actually paid for downloads rather than CD's it would have been a huge mess for me trying to rebuild that collection. But since I've got the actual CD's all I have to do is pop them in the CD/DVD drive on my computer and 60 seconds later the entire album is on my computer again! And I can play my CD's in the car, which I can't do with filed on my computer (not without burning them to disc, or copying them to a flash drive). I'm going to buy CD's as long as I can. As long as they're available I'm a buyer. |
Re: The CD Thread
Backup the hard drive, and you won't have to even spend 60 seconds reripping, per disc. You also won't have lost all of the downloaded tracks. Seems pretty simple.
As far as the car, I burn a DVD's worth of songs to listen to, and use the ipod if I remember to bring it. Listening experience isn't all that great in the car in the first place, so it's not a big deal if the mp3 loses some due to compression. At home, I listen to FLAC rips. If I bought from Bandcamp, I get the FLAC files. First thing I do when I buy a cd is slap it onto my computer. I flip through the booklet once, put the disc into a box and never look at it again. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by mndtrp
(Post 12498735)
Backup the hard drive, and you won't have to even spend 60 seconds reripping, per disc. You also won't have lost all of the downloaded tracks. Seems pretty simple.
As far as the car, I burn a DVD's worth of songs to listen to, and use the ipod if I remember to bring it. Listening experience isn't all that great in the car in the first place, so it's not a big deal if the mp3 loses some due to compression. At home, I listen to FLAC rips. If I bought from Bandcamp, I get the FLAC files. First thing I do when I buy a cd is slap it onto my computer. I flip through the booklet once, put the disc into a box and never look at it again. Back up my HD, burn CD, rip into PC, transfer to phone, sync into player, etc etc... Who's got the time for all that shit? |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 12498352)
The whole digital music thing is so opposite of how most people grew up listening to music before the turn of the century that it's ridiculous.
I still read album credits, scan through the lyrics, check out the pictures, etc, in the booklet that comes with the CD. You can't do that with digital music. I'm also a fan of booklets, but some albums have digital booklets that attempt to replicate the experience. Plus, much of that stuff is now available online, while before the booklet might be the only place you could find it.
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 12498352)
I have had such bad luck with computers - I've lost thousands of audio files that I've ripped from CD when my computers have taken a permanent dump. If I had actually paid for downloads rather than CD's it would have been a huge mess for me trying to rebuild that collection.
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498769)
I eliminate 3 or 4 of your steps by just slapping the CD into my car.
Back up my HD, burn CD, rip into PC, transfer to phone, sync into player, etc etc... Who's got the time for all that shit? |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498313)
I, personally, have more shelf-space for music than I do digital space.
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498313)
Also, it's a lot easier for me to pop a CD into my car's stereo, than it is to download a song onto a device, and plug it into my car to listen to.
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498313)
Not to mention, the CD sounds a billion times better.
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498313)
But I seem to be the only one who cares.
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Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by davidh777
(Post 12498783)
Yes, digital music is different, but that's not always a bad thing. Portability and convenience are amazing.
I'm also a fan of booklets, but some albums have digital booklets that attempt to replicate the experience. Plus, much of that stuff is now available online, while before the booklet might be the only place you could find it. |
Re: The CD Thread
Today I wanted to buy CD's. The new Soto and Armored Saint releases are must have's for me - but no one has them in stock so I can't buy them!
There are a few other titles I want to buy, but no one has them locally, either. So it's not a situation where no one wants to buy CD's, and it's not a situation where stores can't sell them, it's just that they don't stock much anymore. Yes, sales are way down, but they're even further down because no one stocks a reasonable amount of titles anymore, so they lose those impulse buys. |
Re: The CD Thread
Does anybody else just sit and listen to music? I've got a spare bedroom set up as a music room with separate sound system from the theater system. I'll completely skip tv for a few hours or entire night. Just sit, not doing any other thing, just listen, to cds.
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Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by rw2516
(Post 12499245)
Does anybody else just sit and listen to music? I've got a spare bedroom set up as a music room with separate sound system from the theater system. I'll completely skip tv for a few hours or entire night. Just sit, not doing any other thing, just listen, to cds.
And of course I listen to albums that I enjoy all the way through, played in sequence, as I've never been drawn to acts that can only churn out a couple good songs per album, leaving the rest as filler. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 12499120)
CD's in a small case with the pages are pretty portable, too.
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Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by davidh777
(Post 12499376)
C'mon, you aren't really comparing the portability of a single CD in a CD player to a digital device, are you?
No, they aren't as portable as a digital device, but I still enjoy burning CD's for the car... |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by rw2516
(Post 12499245)
Does anybody else just sit and listen to music? I've got a spare bedroom set up as a music room with separate sound system from the theater system. I'll completely skip tv for a few hours or entire night. Just sit, not doing any other thing, just listen, to cds.
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Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by B5Erik
(Post 12499122)
Today I wanted to buy CD's. The new Soto and Armored Saint releases are must have's for me - but no one has them in stock so I can't buy them!
There are a few other titles I want to buy, but no one has them locally, either. So it's not a situation where no one wants to buy CD's, and it's not a situation where stores can't sell them, it's just that they don't stock much anymore. Yes, sales are way down, but they're even further down because no one stocks a reasonable amount of titles anymore, so they lose those impulse buys. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by slop101
(Post 12498769)
I eliminate 3 or 4 of your steps by just slapping the CD into my car.
Back up my HD, burn CD, rip into PC, transfer to phone, sync into player, etc etc... Who's got the time for all that shit? |
Re: The CD Thread
It's never that simple/stratigh-forward when I rip stuff into my ipod - there's always something with song order or something else that I have to tweak before and after I rip. Also, my car's pretty much the only place I can use my ipod (no speakers on my work PC), so it's almost like a useless process when I can just grab a CD.
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Re: The CD Thread
I'm down to about 1 - 2 a year. And generally with those I'll buy direct from the artist to get freebies and whatnot. I just can't justify the expense with things like Spotify around.
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Re: The CD Thread
Yes, I still purchase CDs and will as long as the medium is available. I only "purchase" digital when it's free.
I purchased a couple last month and have a couple on order. While I'm down from the 10-25 per month of several years back I still make the occasional purchase, usually about 1 per month. That's mainly because I own almost everything I truly want and pick up new stuff when I "discover" just *who* made that recording I enjoyed years ago, stumble across a song I like that's been "rare" or hard to find, or hear the very rare new recording I like enough to own. There are still a dozen or so albums I'd like to purchase on CD but they've just not been released for one reason or another. I have no desire to rip copies of everything to the computer. I listen on my stereo or in the car - neither of which will play MP3 files. I *do* have a portable MP3 player for when I walk but getting tracks on it is a bit of a pain. More often than not I just take a portable CD player. Here are the facts about ripping a CD: Under US copyright law, if you convert (rip) an original CD that you own to digital files, then this qualifies as 'Fair Use'. As long as you use it for your own personal use and don't distribute the copyrighted material to others, then you will not be breaking the law. Points to consider: Only rip original CDs that you legitimately own - borrowing an original CD off someone doesn't count. You can transfer digital music files to your own personal MP3 player providing those files have been ripped directly from a CD that you legitimately own. Only copy original CDs that you legitimately own; you can burn ONE copy only for your own personal use. Borrowing an original CD off someone to make a copy for yourself or others is illegal. That includes your local Library. Copying digital music files from someone else’s MP3 player or computer, even if they own the original CD, is illegal. If you sell or give away the CD you're legally obligated to delete the digital copy. If the original becomes damaged you have to keep it to prove ownership, even if it's totally unplayable. If you throw it out you are to delete/destroy the copy. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by BobO'Link
(Post 12500599)
Only rip original CDs that you legitimately own - borrowing an original CD off someone doesn't count.
You can transfer digital music files to your own personal MP3 player providing those files have been ripped directly from a CD that you legitimately own. Only copy original CDs that you legitimately own; you can burn ONE copy only for your own personal use. Borrowing an original CD off someone to make a copy for yourself or others is illegal. That includes your local Library. Copying digital music files from someone else’s MP3 player or computer, even if they own the original CD, is illegal. If you sell or give away the CD you're legally obligated to delete the digital copy. If the original becomes damaged you have to keep it to prove ownership, even if it's totally unplayable. If you throw it out you are to delete/destroy the copy. |
Re: The CD Thread
Originally Posted by Josh-da-man
(Post 12500764)
And todays's word is unenforceable.
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