Classical, Jazz, or Rock?


Pink Floyd has finally come out on SACD, The Stones a couple months back.

For some reason the record companies believe all audiophiles listen to Classical music exclusively. When they launch a new Audiophile format like SACD, the think all the people who buy these high-end rigs are Classical music lovers.

My question is, of these three, Classical, Jazz, or Rock?
In your collections, which is the Dominant choice, which one do you own the most recordings in.

Thanks for you comments and input.
Ron
128x128rockinroni
Rock, classical and jazz covers approx. 500 albums (out of a total of 3500 CD's and LP's). A guestimate is that 50 of the 500 are R&R, 350 are classical and 100 are jazz. The other 3000 albums would then be "other" music.
You act like there is only 3 kinds of music.There are
hundred of musical artforms,Why don"t you open up your
ears to some of them!
TATERS
Why don"t YOU read the question.
I'm sure that Rockinroni knows that there are more than "3" kinds of music.
" Why don"t you open up your ears to some of them!"

Man you're RUDE!!!
You guys might wanna' try getting in touch w/ Vince McMahon. Might be a really good schtick for the WWF (or is it WWE now?).
Started out w/ Hendrix, Who, Cream, Stones... Got hooked. Got into just about any other mind altering stuff I could find. Rehab is not an option.
The category thing has some usefulness I guess, but it seems like most really interesting or compelling recordings don't neatly fit into one of the big three categories. Gun to the head answer:
20% Rock
40% Jazz
10% Classical
30% Other

PS It seems like alot of of recordings that don't have any kind of "audiophile" packaging assigned to them sound better than many SACDs, HDCDs and XRCDs.
Rock/Pop 20%
Hip Hop 20%
Dance 15%
Soul/R&B 15%
Psychedelia 15%
Other 15%
Like Ive suggested many times before:
1) download KazaaLite
2) download music youve read about in music magazines
3)if you like it go out and buy the album
4) if you dont like it delete it from your harddrive.