http://www.sevenoaksart.co.uk/images/record1.gif
― ian, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 19:19 (eighteen years ago)
1) nah, I'm the kind of person who saves everything 2) ??? 3) I never exclusively bought CDs, it was always a mix of vinyl, cassette (back in the day), or mp3 formats. I see no reason why this will change for me in the near future.
― NoTimeBeforeTime, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 19:21 (eighteen years ago)
1) too lazy really - and they're not worth that much anyway 2) never completely stopped buying vinyl, so it's not even an accurate record 3) I''ve bought maybe 6 cds this year and maybe 300 LPs (and some cassettes, second hand for the car)
― sonofstan, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 19:38 (eighteen years ago)
Also, I may want to rip at a higher bitrate later once hd prices come down.
yeah i thought about that. A couple weeks ago I embarked on digitizing my collection, starting with albums I didn't like that much; I ripped ~ 30 cds @ 320 which is fine for those but my main collection I'm probably gonna want to do in flac or whatever for posterity but i haven't done the math on what i'll need for space. I got 2 500G drives on black friday and I was gonna send one back but maybe I won't. than again i've been latched to rhapsody pretty hard lately and soon even the mp3s might be ancillary to how i'm listening to music. so much up in the air.
― tremendoid, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 20:03 (eighteen years ago)
soon as I'm satisfied with backing up, and keeping the habit, I'm selling all my CDs. I need the space and I need the money.
― dan selzer, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 20:04 (eighteen years ago)
i've sold all of my cds. still buy vinyl, which i also sell sometimes. while it's impractical, it retains its value better (and escalates in value far more often) and is more 'fun'. sue me
― resolved, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 20:59 (eighteen years ago)
I keep the price stickers on my CDs, and it amazes me just how much I was paying for music in the 90s. £15 - £16 for some CDs was not unusual.
We still quite frequently pay $25-$35 AUD for some CD albums in this country. And they wonder why ppl use torrents.
― Trayce, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:03 (eighteen years ago)
resolved, did you just rip your CDs into FLAC format and keep them on your hard drive or something?
― three handclaps, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:08 (eighteen years ago)
i ripped the ones that deserved it to FLAC + mp3 (for ipod), most of them just to variable rate mp3. and then a lot i just sold without bothering.
― resolved, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:10 (eighteen years ago)
Will you bother trying now to sell off your existing CDs?
maybe. next year I might be compelled to "monetize" my vinyl collection.
Will you leave them as a record of 80s/90s to early 00s buying?
hate to say it but after sitting there unplayed for awhile they just take up space.
Will you continuing buying CDs selectively alongside downloading, for reasons of completing certain artists or genres?
Barely. I stream music on my computer, listen to old CDs less & less often. CDs/itunes I buy as gifts.
― m coleman, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:14 (eighteen years ago)
First off, CDs are still the primary way i listen to music, and I don't download very often.
1.) I'll hang onto my CDs for a long, long time, until they rot away (none of them have). I stopped selling back CDs a few years ago, because I tend to regret it later on. I used to regularly purge my collection of stuff if I hadn't played it in awhile, but there are too many CDs that I'm kicking myself now for selling then.
Plus, it always killed me when I tried to sell stuff that I knew was of really high musical quality or that someone would love to have, and the clerk would offer a pathetic couple of bucks (usually less!) for it. Most used stores never offer very much for CDs, and now when I think about it, the best offer I've ever received (about $3 for a CD, not common at all) is just not worth it to me. I'd rather hang on to the album, sorry, then take your 50 cents.
2. I'll keep my CDs as much more than just a record of this particular time, as they have fucking music on them!!
3. I'll probably buy CDs for quite a while. As others have mentioned, there are so many good finds on used CDs right now, it's great. So much stuff that I would never expect to find in used shops. It's only going to get better over the next few years, too.
― Mark Clemente, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:14 (eighteen years ago)
Newbury Comics usually gives about $3 per CD.
― three handclaps, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:41 (eighteen years ago)
1) No - mainly because CDs are not worth much now, particularly when trying to trade them in at a record store.
2) Most of the CDs I listen to regularly have been ripped now, but I'll keep them as a backup and also because of the possibilty of ripping in higher quality formats/higher bitrates later.
3) I still buy CDs sometimes but nowhere near as often as I used to - I've gone from half a dozen a week in 2001 to a couple a month now. But if I see a box set at a cheap price I'll probably buy it.
― snoball, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:48 (eighteen years ago)
Those of you who sell off your CDs, someday your hard drive is gonna fail. If you're lucky, you'll have it backed up to another drive. But then that one could fail as you're trying to dump it to your new hard drive. Then I will point and laugh.
I've never had a hard drive die on me ever before. Meanwhile in that time a lot of my records and CDs got damaged in a flood. Life's funneee.
― blueski, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:50 (eighteen years ago)
I wonder how homeowner's insurance would cover a hard drive filled with burned FLACs. Are you just screwed or could you reasonably claim the full value of replacing them on iTunes or whatever?
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:53 (eighteen years ago)
i sold them on amazon btw, the run of the mill ones at least. you get a lot more money that way if you're prepared to go to spend an hour going packing/going to the post office every few days.
― resolved, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:54 (eighteen years ago)
x-post but when your hd dies it's all gone. and the probability is much higher than all your cds being destroyed at once...
― alex in mainhattan, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:56 (eighteen years ago)
word. i'm still reeling from getting over £30 for a tatty Sasha & Digweed CD. xp
what is with you hd-failure doomsayers? you have to fuck a hd up pretty bad before the data on it is completely irretrievable.
― blueski, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 21:58 (eighteen years ago)
Oh I'm just curious from an insurance standpoint. Like what if someone broke into your house and stole your HD. Can you only claim the HD or could you reasonably claim the cost of replacing the MP3s (I just talked to my boss-a former underwriter--and he's gonna find out for me)?
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 22:00 (eighteen years ago)
once i had a hd which seemed perfectly ok. but suddenly it crashed. it had been formatted a couple of megabytes too high. when i reached the limit it was all over.
― alex in mainhattan, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 22:01 (eighteen years ago)
presumably it might differ according to the original source of the mp3s. like if you've bought them from digital sources in the first place you'll have the receipts etc to demonstrate this. if you've just ripped your cd collection i assume you'd be shit out of luck.
― resolved, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 22:22 (eighteen years ago)
The downloading thread is bad for music. People need to see an entire album as an artistic statement, and not just pick single tracks.
The only positive thing is that people are at least less fixated on singles, able to see that there may be good tracks that aren't hit singles too. But generally, downloading is bad bad bad bad!
― Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 22:49 (eighteen years ago)
BAD!
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:02 (eighteen years ago)
Bad?
― John Justen, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:03 (eighteen years ago)
bad bad bad bad
― latebloomer, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:03 (eighteen years ago)
On the insurance thing, pretty sure the only things that would be insurable would be receipted downloads, as you don't actually legally "own" the ripped mp3s if the CD is gone, thus they have no insurable value.
xpost
― John Justen, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:06 (eighteen years ago)
People need to see an entire hamburger as an artistic statement, and not just pick off the pickles or eat the grilled onions.
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:06 (eighteen years ago)
http://www.baronbob.com/hamburgercdholder.jpg
― Euler, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:08 (eighteen years ago)
Snacking is destroying the meal preparation industry
― Shakey Mo Collier, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:10 (eighteen years ago)
home cooking is destroying the fast food industry.
― John Justen, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:11 (eighteen years ago)
The hamburger analogy isn't so hot. I prefer to think of an album as very much like a box of chocolates.
― blueski, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:16 (eighteen years ago)
yes, yes, and yes i guess. the last few times I went to sell stuff back i didn't get a whole lot, and with 800+ CDs still it's kind of a pain to drag them up to amoeba and then back home. BUT, I did sell more stuff recently, and got more money for them than I'd expected; might have just been because I had a new buyer. I also sold off a ton of rare stuff on ebay because this stuff is never going to be worth more than it is right now. But there are things I still can't see myself getting rid of, and I'll still buy CDs from time to time, of artists I like, who pay attention to packaging
― akm, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:18 (eighteen years ago)
Geir you assume no one downloads whole albums, then? Oh wait why am I even arguing.
― Trayce, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:20 (eighteen years ago)
Mark Clemente OTM on all counts. Same for me.
― stephen, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:26 (eighteen years ago)
you have to fuck a hd up pretty bad before the data on it is completely irretrievable.
That's not entirely true. I've had an external (Maxtor) drive fail that wasn't fucked with at all, and internal (IBM) drive that, well, it was involved with Microsoft products, so I guess was doomed to fail. (Back on a Mac, thnx Bill.)
Secondly, have you ever paid to have your data retrieved? I did, once, for 40GB worth of data - and paid about $1K/10GB (aka $4K). Now I've got two external drives, backing up my backup of my backup. But I would guess that, for example, $4K to retrieve one's digital library would, by cost alone, define "irretrievable."
― dblcheeksneek, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:35 (eighteen years ago)
Youch. I had no idea. That's crazy expensive.
― Alex in SF, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:43 (eighteen years ago)
when you say fail do you mean it was completely beyond repair/no way to salvage at all?
― blueski, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:55 (eighteen years ago)
Geir you assume no one downloads whole albums, then?
Some do, but way too few. We need to get back to the early to mid 70s where typical album acts such as Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Yes and Genesis dominated absolutely everything.
― Geir Hongro, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:57 (eighteen years ago)
i've had a few drives fail; i'm not sure what the problem was, but it had to do with the b-tree something or other getting corrupted, and no operating system (windows, mac, dos) could read certain sectors. I'm relatively positive running norton on the drive made it worse actually.
― akm, Wednesday, 12 December 2007 23:59 (eighteen years ago)
"We need to get back to the early to mid 70s where typical album acts such as Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Yes and Genesis dominated absolutely everything."
Geir you should go back in time Terminator-stylee and kill Malcolm McClaren's mother or something.
― Alex in SF, Thursday, 13 December 2007 00:01 (eighteen years ago)
People need to see an entire album as an artistic statement, and not just pick single tracks.
so funny. geir's far from the only person who thinks this, and i shake my head sadly at every one of them
― electricsound, Thursday, 13 December 2007 00:23 (eighteen years ago)
anyway
Will you bother trying now to sell off your existing CDs? - possibly, but it may end up being too much effort Will you leave them as a record of 80s/90s to early 00s buying? - some of them i might, but there's not really any need Will you continuing buying CDs selectively alongside downloading, for reasons of completing certain artists or genres? - kinda.. i like having the disc if i'm a big fan, mainly for liners & pics. i couldn't give two hoots about the "extra quality" of a cd vs mp3 (which is pretty hypocritical of me considering i am obsessed by the difference with regards to my own recordings)
― electricsound, Thursday, 13 December 2007 00:26 (eighteen years ago)
http://www.prosofteng.com/products/data_rescue.php
― dan selzer, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:10 (eighteen years ago)
if disk warrior fails, use that.
We need to get back to the early to mid 70s where typical album acts such as Pink Floyd, Led Zeppelin, Yes and Genesis dominated absolutely everything.
Christ you sound like my boyfriend haha.
― Trayce, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:15 (eighteen years ago)
i used something called stellar phoenix succesfully as well, but it only works on FAT formatted drives
― akm, Thursday, 13 December 2007 01:26 (eighteen years ago)
I've got a room with racks on almost all the walls (except the one with a couch on it). My CD collection is a bit of a changing art collage of spines, when I had it in the same room as my PC I almost memorized the color flows.
The volume of my racks is the limit of CDs I'll own, about 4500 or so. I try to purge 100 or so every year but the inflow is still greater than the outflow and all the truly horrible albums have long since been sold. I'm now at the Ned Point, where I'm ripping and selling albums that aren't bad but simply never grabbed me. I figure I'll have reached my limit in 3-5 years.
But, yeah, I have fetishized the physical. I love getting a CD in the mail, or tracking down something hard to find even if I've already downloaded it. But I also want to make my own rips because almost no one sells high-quality VBR's of the stuff I buy.
They may end up in boxes one day after I've ripped them all and we decide to repurpose the music room.
― Mr. Odd, Thursday, 13 December 2007 04:47 (eighteen years ago)
I had the internal drive repaired out of apparent necessity (it held all of my class notes/outlines and crashed a week ahead of my first year law school exams). I only say "apparent" b/c, well, it didn't seem to improve my grades much (sigh).
The external drive, as I still had (and have!) a vast majority of my music on CD, I didn't look into salvaging b/c it just didn't have a pulse (i.e., it'd turn on sometimes, but usually not, or wouldn't get recognized by any of my PCs/Macs) and given the aforementioned expense and lack of the necessity above, just wasn't worth saving.
I wholeheartedly agree and it's the single greatest driver of my continued purchasing of CDs. I think the only thing that sabotages the argument is artists that don't deliberately set out to make an album per se (and are, by design singles artists). But then, I rarely find myself impressed by such singles artists and even less frequently cite them as influential either in my continued study (as it were) of music or their impact on their peers.
― dblcheeksneek, Thursday, 13 December 2007 05:08 (eighteen years ago)
1. No 2. Some, yes 3. Definitely
I won't buy anything with DRM though. That's already ballsed up a couple of my artist collections.
― Autumn Almanac, Thursday, 13 December 2007 06:14 (eighteen years ago)
1. No, never have have, don't think I'll start now. I'll always have the nagging feeling that just one day I might be dying to hear Miranda Sex Garden's first album at 2AM
2. Yes, being a relatively nostalgic person, browsing my collection always reminds me of my musical phases. Also, and mostly, for me a CD collection is a relatively social thing, whereby guests can check out what I have, pick sth out to put it on or borrow it. Obviously, you could also do that by browsing my iTunes library but that strikes me as somewhat unsociable
3. Yes, but like said upthread, these days I usually dowload first and then buy what I really like. Somehow, psychologically, I can only engage seriously with a song or an album if I have it on CD. Old fashioned, I know.
― baaderonixx, Thursday, 13 December 2007 15:29 (eighteen years ago)
I bought car headlight polisher for my actual car headlights once. It didn't work very well, imo.
― peace, man, Thursday, 6 November 2025 14:31 (six months ago)
i assume your headlights were yellow and faded - for that you need a healight restoration kit like the one 3m sells and ideally a power drill. meguiars plastx won’t cut it (literally)
― 龜, Thursday, 6 November 2025 18:18 (six months ago)
That sounds accurate.
― peace, man, Thursday, 6 November 2025 18:57 (six months ago)
The 1975 have just confirmed why you should always buy the cd option whenever possible.
― mark e, Thursday, 6 November 2025 20:22 (six months ago)
??
― challopvious (sleeve), Thursday, 6 November 2025 20:23 (six months ago)
see the recent thread revival re the 1975.
― mark e, Thursday, 6 November 2025 20:32 (six months ago)
The polisher made superunknown sound like the 1975 fuck you guys
― Heez, Friday, 7 November 2025 17:29 (six months ago)
I actually am in a region where I can’t find a new or used copy of it but yeah a new copy is due next time I am
― Heez, Friday, 7 November 2025 17:31 (six months ago)
lol xp
― challopvious (sleeve), Friday, 7 November 2025 17:38 (six months ago)
― Heez,
genuine lol.
― mark e, Friday, 7 November 2025 19:12 (six months ago)
There are CD resurfacing machines, but I think they’re pretty $. The only person I’ve own who had one was a dealer.
― dentist looking too comfortable singing the blues (hardcore dilettante), Saturday, 8 November 2025 03:39 (six months ago)
^ I love the 'drug' aspect of this statement.
― earlnash, Saturday, 8 November 2025 06:45 (six months ago)
I've tried diy disc polishing - made it worse. Sent it off to an eBay disc polishing/refurb service (about £5 I think) and it came back playing perfectly.
― ringworm, Saturday, 8 November 2025 18:40 (six months ago)
Was listening to my Klim discman thing on the train yesterday and a guy, who was probably about 20, said ‘oh, that’s so cool - I’ve seen pictures of CD players before but never actually seen one in real life’.
― ShariVari, Thursday, 4 December 2025 16:50 (six months ago)
💀
― Tracer Hand, Friday, 5 December 2025 11:01 (five months ago)
On that note, does anyone have recommendations for ~good~ portable CD players? I gave up after all the early-00s ones I got on ebay kept dying. The new ones I see are all super cheap.
Never heard of klim but will check them out. Having a rechargeable battery would be excellent
― ed.b, Friday, 5 December 2025 13:31 (five months ago)
IME the 80s/90s discmen are built like tanks but they don't have good skip protection and aren't as good at reading scratched up discs as the 00s ones
― 龜, Friday, 5 December 2025 14:49 (five months ago)
some of the new ones out of the Chinese retro audio market seem pretty good
I bought a duplicate of my last Sony player a number of years ago (rip the original, dropped it too many times during college) and it still works pretty well and has optical out. You know, in case you want to connect it to a system that has that, or you really want to dub some CDs to minidisc. That'd be the Sony D-EJ715. I wouldn't recommend buying a used or deadstock player overall, though. Probability is too high that they'll break or be on their last legs.
― mh, Friday, 5 December 2025 15:15 (five months ago)
I like the Klim Nomad so much I got a second one. Rechargeable battery and the ability to play via Bluetooth is great. Battery life isn’t super long and I think if you’re a proper audiophile you might have concerns about ASP compression, or w/e, but it’s perfect for my needs.
― ShariVari, Friday, 5 December 2025 17:26 (five months ago)
I bought many duplicates of the ca 2003 sony discman I ~loved~ but the buttons stopped working. I’m sure someone could fix that, but probably not for less than what it’s worth. So then I bought a classic tank discman, and it stopped working too.
After some research, I think I’ll splure for the FiiO dm13, which seems to be the best audiophile-leaning option. I mean, if I’m going to playing CDs at all might as well get something that sounds good.
Also, I bought 10 CDs this week (thanks bandcamp) so that’s where I’m at, despite trying to drastically cut down new purchases
― ed.b, Friday, 5 December 2025 19:28 (five months ago)