Streaming Is To Audio What Red Plastic Cups Are To Wine


Unpacking and going through my vinyl collection, it occurs to me that vinyl is it, whereas streaming is Audio’s red plastic cup.

The best wines taste low-shelf in the red plastic cup. Yes, the red plastic cup is cheap and convenient, just like streaming. Wine should feel the same regardless of the vessel - it’s the same wine - but it does not. So should music - but it does not. Streamed music may sound (nearly) as good as vinyl, but it feels... disposable. Vinyl does not. Vinyl is the thing. Vinyl is it! Just my opinion, of course.

devinplombier

The only negative I have with vinyl, is I need to get rid of all this stuff I got left.........

@waynefia I'll take it! I'll send you a shipping label 😃

 

I'm 65 and grew up with vinyl and had a turntable with my first system when I was 18 years old. Over the years I had a career, family and other life detours and expenses and hifi was not my priority! Eventually I had no real stereo and my vinyl collection disappeared. I can't even imagine trying to resurrect that today with the costs of records. My music selection is so much greater with streaming music and the sound I hear is still amazing! To each his own I guess. If you always had a huge vinyl collection that you've owned for decades then yeah I totally understand it. My guess many of us are in the same situation I'm in.

Of course, it’s not necessarily just a binary choice between vinyl and streaming Qobuz, Tidal, etc. See what I did there.😀

I am sure that I am not the only one who has quite a big collection of ripped CDs and rips of other optical discs as well as downloads and digitalised vinyl records in my local library of digital files. There’s even some of my own music included. I still buy the odd CD now and again.

Thanks to Roon, I can easily select any of these from a single screen on a tablet for each particular artists that integrates everything including what’s available on Qobuz. I really am spoiled for choice.

Yet often these days, I choose to play a vinyl record on my turntable. This a refreshing throw back to a simpler more innocent time. A reminder of a little mono record player sitting on the floor playing Beatles 45s. It’s also a different kind of sonic treat.

How blessed I am to have lived to see an age where all this choice is available in stunning high quality. How foolish it is to expend precious energy on audiophile neurosis.

There was a time when my digital and then streaming listening experience was clearly inferior to my LP12 running vinyl. My current digital experience with lots of evolution and cash has become more rewarding than my vinyl experiences. Being a strange person I can't get over the wear factor of the vinyl itself and all the equipment needed to play it wearing out as well. The pops and sounds of worn and wearing vinyl disturb my state of mind when listening.

That said, I never had the patience dating back to college to listen to both sides of an album. The artist's desire to mix genre's/tempos/style is a wear out for me. I am usually in the mood for a type of music, but I'm forced to listen to James Taylor for example mix in Jazz and Blue Grass into my pop. Plus most albums have songs that suck, time to move on. At least 3/4 of my vinyl is from one hit wonder pop stars. You buy the record and then struggle through the rest of the side. B side usually completely sucked.  Digital allows me to jump around easily and/or make play lists of my choice. Plus I don't live in the past as my subscriptions push me forward and let me sample for no additional cost all kinds of new artists and new sounds.

I acknowledge that often one already knows the music with classical, or if you preview an album on digital then buy it, you lower the risk. We are lucky to have all these options, but I'm not going back to 8 track, cassettes, radio, 78s, 45s, super discs, CDs, reel to reel nor 33s., but I'm glad that everyone can if they wish!