Why do you listen to records?


Do you listen to records for the SQ, or do you just prefer to listen to music through this medium?  
I find myself putting records on occasionally, ( I have a large  collection) but I’m not sure if it’s because of their sound.  I certainly have the availability of millions of songs or compositions to listen to by streaming, and the sound quality is just abut the same, and, of course, the variety is endless.

So why listen to records?

rvpiano

LPs are also objects that are nice to own.  They can have expressive artwork and enlightening liner notes.  And they can sound remarkably good if conditions are right.  In general, I like to own recorded music in the format it was originally created for, although that isn't always possible.  And yes, I even have 78s in my collection.

As for sound quality, I have LPs that sound great and others that sound awful.  Likewise for CDs and other digital formats/delivery systems.  In some cases, original tapes are lost or damaged and an old LP is the superior media that can't be improved upon.  OTOH, I have new digital recordings made from original tapes that sound amazing.  I am especially impressed by DSD recordings released by High Definition Tape Transfers.

I want to be able to enjoy music in all formats and I do.  However, I find myself drawn to LPs and play them often.

I am tempted to say we listen to vinyl records because we are mainly old guys who grew up with them.

Yet I can't. My daughter and two sons (aged 37, 25 and 23) all do it too.

on Saturday i had some visitors; two long time audiophile friends and a music lover/non audiophile. we began with a track list my friend brought of a dozen excellent well recorded country/folk vocals on streaming digital. "his" music he lives with daily.

we all very much enjoyed them and i’m happy that my Roon history will now have them as i will be able to revisit them as it’s music i like but don’t really know that much. not in my normal personal wheelhouse. it’s a great part of collective listening is new music horizon’s it opens. the gift that keeps on giving. really outstanding unpretentious music. in the past when i hear country music i like i have wished i knew more about it. this can help me to get into it. it has real feeling to it. not as much of a construct as most pop/light jazz.

after we finished those, i played 4 quick cuts of vocals on vinyl that i thought my friends would enjoy to give them a sense of how vocals on vinyl compared.

1--Crosby Stills and Nash, 45rpm single disc ’Lady of the Island and Helplessly Hoping.
2--Eagles Live, 33rpm ’Seven Bridges Road’
3--Nat King Cole, Love is the Thing, 45rpm---’When I Fall in Love’.
4--the non audiophile visitor mentioned he liked opera, so i also played Pavarotti singing ’Nessun Dorma’ from a 1973 recording London box set of Puccini’s Turandot.

no; i did not go to the trouble to find and play the digital versions of those analog recordings; but i have in the past heard all of those many times on digital because the music is superb and i love it. they are nice on digital.

the digital vocals were fully satisfying. they pulled you in and the flow and boogie factor of the recordings touched all the bases. it’s a playlist i will explore. honest and pure. but the vinyl vocals were on another level of human touch. obviously iconic recordings each one. great artists. degrees more real and pulsing with real tactile energy. kind of laser focused and profound. transcendent. a more physical experience. leaves you breathless. makes you forget everything else. where i like to be.

i’m just relating my own perceptions. there were plenty of oohs and ahhs from my visitors but i don’t want to speak for them.

we played music for 2 more hours before we ran out of time and there was more of that stuff, i’m just citing one part of the session.