OP,
Surprisingly, almost all of the comments in response to your post are true...the positive, negative and in between.
Proceed on your Vinyl project with your eyes,ears and wallet open. It's a Jungle out there...
Sound quality of new vinyl recordings.
I would like to get back to vinyl. I have not heard any new vinyl yet but I question the sound quality and I hope someone can help as I have not yet found the answer to my question. Are new vinyl recordings from original analog source or are they just copying digital onto vinyl. If there are both out there what do I look for to tell the difference before I buy
A good digital recording these days can easily reproduce what’s in most older analog recordings. I never dumped my older vinyl and still pick older vinyl up whenever I can if the price is right. Especially obscure older albums from the golden age 60-70 years old. If one is new to the hobby and wants to own versus stream, I can see the appeal of new vinyl at $30+ a pop for 20 minutes of music per side. But the reality is the advantage records have always had over CD is the overall packaging. |
@ghdprentice I hear you. I’m only a few years behind you. I used to post my system but always decide to take it down after awhile due to privacy concerns. I do have lots of pictures though and am not against sharing those case by case as needed.
If ever in central Maryland/DC area I love having guests with common interests come visit. |
@mapman … “A good digital recording these days can easily reproduce what’s in most older analog recordings.”
+1 if you put the money you might have spent on an analog end you can upgrade your digital end… and over time have a better sounding system.
On the other hand, if you like fiddling… scouring record stores for gems (getting a good record cleaning machine)… vinyl can be fun. |