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

smileywinkyes

Here's an excellent idea for your acoustic/electric/mechanical experimentation extravaganza.

While you are DJ'ing (wacking away at your turntable with those straws), pull a couple of extra straws from your helmhlotzing speaker ports and stick it up you know where...it could convert yourself wholesomely into a helmholtz resonator, not just the speaker.

That would be some genius helmholtz level acoustic/mechanical/electrical concepts in implementation, i bet.....(acoustic acoustic)

@newton_john 

As I remember it now, what originally prompted me to write this post was that when I listen to records I tend to listen more for the sound than the music, and was wondering if others did the same thing.

@milehighguy ”has the world always been this angry?”

No. I don’t think so. There has been a trend over the last few decades of entitlement, anonymity (internet), and Political rhetoric that has stoked the internal bias of fear over contentment. The current era reminds me of Churchill’s first volume of World War 2: ‘The Gathering Storm’.

@parkergetdean 

Sorry, we were talking at cross purposes. However, I still disagree. 

Yes, we’ve had two new formats in the past forty years, CD and streaming. Maybe, some of us have the exactly same turntable they did forty years ago, but mine has got massively better than it was then. In general, they have come a long way.

There have been big technological improvements in bearings, motors, new materials for plinths, power supplies, isolation, MC cartridges, phono stages, optical cartridges, record cleaners, etc. Not to mention digital coming into the processing involved in making records and their replay. Vinyl has developed and evolved alongside the new formats.

@newton_john I don't have strong feelings to argue, whatever.

We can say that a TT being 99.99% more stable, the speed being 99.99% closer to the atomic clock are massive improvements. 

To me, fundamentally, it's refinements, not paradigm shifts, and new technologies introduced.