Buying Records


I always buy new sealed LP records unless new is not available. I only shop eBay. When buying a used record I buy near mint, nothing lower graded. I never seen used mint. I have had good luck with near mint. Most make no noise at all. A few have had a second of very light noise and I am ok with that. I noticed on the very light noise it about disappears if I track VMN95ML at 2.5 grams. It is normally a 2 gram tracking. So tracking on the heavy side may be of benefit.

jimbennet

I have said these things before.  We who play records have a lot in common with members of the flat earth society.  On the other hand, every time I cue up something on Qobuz it feels like a kiss on the telephone.  Mark Twain quipped, difference is what makes horse races.  It is a good time to be alive.

The Internet has been a real boon for me. I buy records from all over the world, mostly older pressings, obscure jazz, protometal -rock/heavy psych, I collide with the "collector" market in some cases. I’ve slowed way down. At peak, I had about 17k LPs, winnowed that down to around 5.5k or so when I moved to Texas, probably bought a thousand more since I’ve been here, and gotten rid of another thousand. 

What I have is fairly curated-- a deep shelf of Vertigo Swirls, pretty substantial label collections of Island pink, Strata-East, some Nimbus West, a couple walls of "classic rock" including preferred pressings,  lots of classical from Decca, London/Decca, EMI ASD, some RCA Dogs and Mercury Living Presence, lots of old audiophile stuff I rarely listen to, but am reluctant to part with; I can "shop" my "stacks" and will occasionally buy a new record but am not chasing the 12th copy of some warhorse, have multiples of some records in the elusive chase for a better sounding copy. There have been preferred dealers over the years, from EIL in England to Ella in Japan, I found a guy selling dumpster finds of sealed Nathan Davis Segue pressings that were tossed when the studio went bankrupt. I used to attend the shows in NY and Austin, don’t much bother anymore. I maintain a few relationships with collectors. It has gotten to be an expensive hobby, it wasn’t always so. And grading is all over the place. It’s nice to encounter a vendor who grades conservatively. 

I learned a lot about cleaning and care when I dove deeply into it in around 2014. Bought a Monks Omni, had the Audio Desk, got a KL and eventually, got a good quality (Furutech branded Orb DF-2) record flattener, which has been a life saver. 

Had my records stored for 20 years. Got back into it and cleaned them all. Now buying OGs at stores or Discogs mainly. Only disappointment is that many listings do not correspond to deadwax matrix.

New records I buy are audiophile pressings. Otherwise streaming does the job. Not as good as vinyl but at par or better than regular reissues that are too often disappointing.
 

I find it best to not buy any new as much as possible.

Far more cost effective to play the stuff l already have more often.

Replaying a record more times brings down the cost per hour ratio.

Makes perfect sense to try and buy the best and more often happily revisit, versus buying everything.

 

Possibly boredom with the collection sets in, and this fuels the need to constantly buy more?  
There must be a balancing influence when a collection becomes so big, there is less compulsion to buy.