Records were the only source outside of radio, and cassette decks didn't arrive until high school, and even then, we only made recordings, never purchasing pre-recorded tapes. It was just natural to play records, never thinking it was a chore; it was what it was. When I purchased my first CD player in the mid-eighties, I was already into better equipment, visiting the audio specialist dealers in town, and I enjoyed it too, maybe in a different way than LPs; my Philips machine was a heavily modified model, and I was happy with it. These days, I buy fewer, quite a bit fewer records but in the last week I did pick up a half dozen or so. I wasn't familiar with Jacques Loussier until a week ago, and checked all my usual local sources to no avail until lastly, who I should have spoke to first, Professor Rob(that's how I refer to him) at Musicdirect, not only was familiar with him had an unopened LP plus a mint Decca London double LP of a live performance from 1965 and I also picked up the new ELP reissue of there first record on MOFI. I brought my two copies of ELP's 1st record to prove to myself that the new digitally sourced record could not better, nice original LPs, but was I proven wrong. Blows away any other copy that I ever heard, not even close, so I couldn't leave without one. Plus MusicDirect was having a Rega event going on with lots of turntables and checkups of customers' turntables, any table for free! It was a fun afternoon of records, food, and lively conversation. The question for me would be: how can I not like records? They're kind of in the blood. One last point: anyone into streaming should read NYT journalist, Liz Pelly's book, "Mood Machine" and how Spotify changed the music business by commoditizing artists work as if it was a bushel of soybeans or corn, paying artists next to nothing and creating AI artists. What I find really weird is how some of these artificial (artists?), have management companies with managers. I wonder what Peter Grant would have thought of all of this if he were alive. Eh, he probably would have got the boys a great financial deal anyways.