How much physical music (CDs, vinyl, minidiscs, cases ingles, whatever) have you bought so far this year?

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Intrigued by BeeOK's statement on the Grizzly Bear thread that he'd buy the album after reading Nitsuh's article in NYmag about indie finances, and that it'd be the first CD he'd bought this year. Maybe BeeOK's bought loads of vinyl, I don't know, I suspect not though (otherwise why not say you'd buy the Grizzly Bear album on LP), but it surprised me: BeeOK is obviously a big music fan otherwise they wouldn't be on here, and I'd kind of assumed that ILMers were amongst the last bastion of people still buying music physically (I'm very aware of how many people here are now digital converts).

So, how much physical music, on whatever format, have you bought this year? I'm interested in how much digital music you've purchased to, but for the sake of sanity I'll limit poll options just to physical purchases; so feel free to talk about digital too, though in your posts.

Poll Results

OptionVotes
I've bought no CDs, LPs, or other physical releases this year 58
20-40 items 31
100+ items 26
10-20 items 20
2-6 items 19
1-2 items 14
40-60 items 13
60-100 items 12
7-10 items 9


comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:00 (twelve years ago)

Damn you iPad for mangling cassingles, and damn me for not checking.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:01 (twelve years ago)

I've bought 27 new releases on CD this year, and 25 'back catalogue' CDs (which includes the new releases of the MBV catalogue, for instance, plus loads of other old stuff I've just bought)' for a total of 52 thus far. As we're moving in a couple of weeks I suspect I won't buy much more for the rest of the year.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:04 (twelve years ago)

quick check : do i count a 10 cd boxset as one item, or 10 ?

i've bought a ton more this year than ever before (boxsets : simple minds, the byrds, roxy music, neil young, elvis, cabaret voltaire, tom moulton).

no digital purchases, all cd.

mark e, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:04 (twelve years ago)

Hmmm, good question (damn technicalities!). I'd say one item in terms of voting (as its one purchase) but obviously mention specifics in posts.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:06 (twelve years ago)

a quick check : 105 single cd albums (suspect i have missed some), plus 9 boxsets

mark e, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:15 (twelve years ago)

Zero

Can't remember how much digital offhand but I wouldn't dream of buying physical music any more

lex pretend, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:17 (twelve years ago)

How much physical music have you been sent as a music writer, Lex, out of interest? Or is it all downloads and streams now?

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:20 (twelve years ago)

Too much physical. I try to deter that wherever possible but it seems that major labels still believe in concepts like the promo cd single, if not in any form of promo album to reach you before your deadline

lex pretend, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:22 (twelve years ago)

I've bought more cds than usual this year, probably close to 40. New and old. Partially because I have been having similar sobering realizations about musicians' incomes to those which Nitsuh's piece so effectively evokes. Partially because they are easier to listen to in my car than other media, despite it having a sort of clunky iPod integration attempt. And I guess partially so they can sit around in my house or car and people can notice them in addition to whatever's currently playing.

At home I use Spotify pretty much 24/7 to listen to a little of anything, everything + I try to buy most of the things that I find myself listening to over and over. Maybe if rather than 6mil people on Spotify there were somehow 600m it could (in a perfect world?) be a legit revenue stream for artists. But I guess it's more likely that would just result in Daniel Ek moving 100 positions up on the millionaires list.

Maybe Youtube digital-tip-jar-button is the only pseudo-viable future for music at this point.

sleepingbag, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:26 (twelve years ago)

I've bought a handful of used records this year. The last time I bought a CD was 2008.

Cap'n Hug-a-Thug (The Reverend), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:29 (twelve years ago)

Should used vinyl be counted in the poll? I've bought a fair amount, mostly priced very low.

Bought a few CDs, mostly as gifts, but occasionally for myself, usually limited to stuff with elaborate packaging. Also some new vinyl like Record Store Day exclusives. Mostly though it's downloads, or increasingly streaming. I'm planning to replace my iPod Touch + cheap dumbphone duo with a iPhone largely so I can stream music in the car, subway, or when walking. Doing so will double my monthly phone bill though.

Lee626, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 07:43 (twelve years ago)

Let's not count used purchases - as this was inspired by musician's income that seems counter-productive.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:01 (twelve years ago)

Around 60 albums on CD, all new releases or compilations, almost all previewed on Spotify before purchase. On the rare occasions when I've bought an album unheard, it's mostly turned out to be a bad bet. (Six Cups of Rebel, I'm looking at YOU.) I mostly buy from Fopp, only from Amazon when I have to. Some purchases from an independent store in Leeds, some at gigs, including a few singles and EPs. Vinyl: I had a Record Store Day splurge at our local vinyl-only indie store, because it's run as a social enterprise and I wanted to show support. Curiously, I made several blind purchases on vinyl that turned out very well indeed, most notably the Personal Space electronic soul comp.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:24 (twelve years ago)

Sadly there's literally only HMV, an Oxfam specialising in msuic, film, and books, and a solitary independent / second-hand shop catering exclusively for Mojo readers left in Exeter now.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:30 (twelve years ago)

I think I've bought about 15 CDs at 10 12"s from MVE this year. Nothing remotely new either. I'm having a weird year with muisc; even though I work 55-60 hours a week in shops that let me play whatever I want, most of the time I'm spinning the same few podcasts/albums, despite this being a year when I could, if I could be bothered, really indulge in hearing as much new stuff/doing as much cratedigging as possible. And aisde from the stuff I've had to review, I don't think I could name you more than five albums I'd actually want to listen to from this year right now.

Blue Collar Retail Assistant (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:33 (twelve years ago)

so, if its allowed, can we have a very brief thread-detour where you tell me what I should be listening to from this year now that I'm at work. Will listen to whatever the first suggestion is. And reeprt back.

Blue Collar Retail Assistant (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:35 (twelve years ago)

Swans.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:40 (twelve years ago)

To test out if you really can play ANYTHING.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:40 (twelve years ago)

Haha, that's one of the ones I've already played down here - turned out that my boss used to be a big fan of them!

Blue Collar Retail Assistant (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:45 (twelve years ago)

Probably only bought about 10 or so new releases on CD so far. Kind of low really, normally I buy around 30-40 new albums a year but I think I also buy more stuff towards the end of the year when I accept that some things will never be up on Spotify or eMusic or whatever so I just buy it on CD unheard. I have bought a fair wodge of back catalogue and reissues though, plus a shitload of digital too.

DJ Mooncup (NickB), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 08:50 (twelve years ago)

New CD and vinyl, 100+.

Hazard of working in a record store.

Five Phoenix Combined Shouting Tortoise Resting Method (GOTT PUNCH II HAWKWINDZ), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:11 (twelve years ago)

Somewhere between 40-50 CD albums, all from 2012. Most I listened to on Spotify first unless they were follow-ups to albums I loved or Spotify wasn't an option. I probably buy about 1/4 of the new albums I listen to on Spotify. If I don't like them enough to buy I'll listen only once or twice.

if, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:16 (twelve years ago)

A conservative 7-10, but that includes a spree in which certain items were heavily reduced. The nearest record shop to me is a town away. I went there on Friday to watch Last Shop Standing and the author gave a talk http://lastshopstanding.com/. It was fairly interesting, and I was moved into making a point of shopping from independent outlets in future if I can. I'm starting to believe that the death of the physical format is quite a dangerous thing because it means the death of the record shop. Whilst researching a piece about my local music scene, it became apparent how important record shops were in their day; not just as outlets but communal hubs. Much of the early rave scene was organised through a network of record shops in and around the Home Counties. Two Bad Mice and Omni Trio produced their biggest tracks in the backroom of a now defunct dance specialist in Hitchin. They were also places where kids would go in their lunch hour to spend pocket money, pick up flyers and hear new tunes.

And yeah, now we have the internet and YouTube and stuff, but a thousand kids sat behind a thousand computer screens isn't the same as a chance encounter in a record store. Purchasing music online is very different from in a shop - there's less chance of buying something "on a whim" for a start, but really it's the communal aspect that concerns me more. Instead of going to your mate's from the shop with a record or CD in your bag you can't wait to show them. When people come over to listen to music, suddenly there's no album cover to skin up on and look at. Music listening has become very insular - suddenly everyone's listening to their own thing on their own iPod with its hegemonic list of artists and albums. The sharing aspect, the whole "hey man what's this, can we listen to it?" factor only exists through Spotify playlists. Many are going to argue and say I'm being a luddite about it - I do love digital, I love having my record collection in one contained space - but I also miss flicking through CD racks looking for something interesting to listen to, or marvelling at weird and wonderful things on other people's shelves, or reading an inlay cover, or looking at an awesome album cover, or bonding with someone in a record shop who just bought your favourite album. This is an essential part of being a music fan, for me and many other people, and if we lose that I think a younger generation will grow up wondering why their parents used to put so much value on listening to music.

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:16 (twelve years ago)

My problem with buying CDs these days is that I tend to take it home, rip it and then plonk it on a shelf where it gathers dust, taking up space and never getting played. Think I'm going to switch to buying a vinyl record with download included at least once a month.

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:28 (twelve years ago)

I haven't bought physical music product since mid-2007. I buy quite a bit of music via amazon mp3 or itunes. not sure how much off the top of my head.

how's life, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:30 (twelve years ago)

I've had all the arguments and discussions and understand thoroughly all the plus points and so on and so forth and it still absolutely baffles me that people who are big music geeks can have not bought a phsyical music product in YEARS. I just can't ever imagine not doing it.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:32 (twelve years ago)

I've been on a panel with Graham Jones, author of Last Shop Standing. Enormously likeable guy. DL, I can tell that you've fallen under his influence - but he's such a dedicated and passionate advocate of independent record stores, that it's impossible not to!

I almost never buy digital, by the way. Only as a last resort.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:32 (twelve years ago)

Like yesterday I cycled to physio first thing and made a 10-minute detour via HMV so I could pick up the Flying Lotus CD. Today I had Swans and Janelle Monae CDs arrive from Amazon. On Sunday I pre-ordered the Daphni CD.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:33 (twelve years ago)

(the Daphni record is SO good btw)

Blue Collar Retail Assistant (Dwight Yorke), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:34 (twelve years ago)

I buy the odd track digitally (generally b-sides, old singles, one-off tracks I want where I'm not interested in the whole album), or maybe a whole EP if I can't get it on CD - Owen Pallett, Antlers. Moving house might encourage more vinyl-buying as we'll be able to keep it in the same room as the record player, thus it might get used. I occasionally download an album nefariously, but 80% of the time I'll then buy it on CD too.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:35 (twelve years ago)

moving house is what completely killed any desire on my part to own physical music again. my dislike of physical objects grows immensely every time i do it.

lex pretend, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:37 (twelve years ago)

I guess moving often would be a complete hassle, but we've been in the current place for 5 years, and anticipate being in the next for 7+.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:40 (twelve years ago)

I haven't even owned a CD player other than my laptop's disc drive in a couple of years. After my whole CD collection got stolen a few years ago, I decided I was done with the format.

Cap'n Hug-a-Thug (The Reverend), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:41 (twelve years ago)

If I did buy CDs, I'd really have no use for them other than ripping them to mp3 anyway.

Cap'n Hug-a-Thug (The Reverend), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:43 (twelve years ago)

moved house at the weekend and tho my new place is great i am in full agreement with lex, must rip and discard my cds, if only i cd happily do the same thing with books

vegetarian beef (Noodle Vague), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:44 (twelve years ago)

I've bought at least one item a week on average, mostly CDs but some vinyl, a mixture of new and second hand. The majority of the "new" items will be reissues and compilations. When I have more time I will aim to estimate the total number so I can do the poll.

Jeff W, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:52 (twelve years ago)

I do question why I continue buying CDs, as even after I've bought them, I'm still more likely to use Spotify for listening to them. (Through the iPhone app and into a DAC via Bluetooth - sound quality is every bit as good as CD.) CDs don't scrobble, that's their problem. Reasons why I continue: 1) no digital music in the car, 2) residual product fetishism, 3) residual "collector" mentality, 4) offline backup, 5) digital purchases still don't feel fully "owned", 6) adequate recompense to the artist. Of these, 6) is the clincher.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 09:59 (twelve years ago)

moving house is what completely killed any desire on my part to own physical music again. my dislike of physical objects grows immensely every time i do it.

― lex pretend, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:37 (5 minutes ago) Bookmark Flag Post Permalink

Yeah, it got to the point where I realised I had an entire wall of music in variously sized units that was just taking up room. When it came to moving there was literally no way of housing them comfortably in the new place (and besides my cuntflap housemates of the time had taken to using my CD inlays as speed-wraps. I could KILL!) Many of the CDs were rips or secondhand things so the resell value wouldn't have outweighed the time and cost of selling them online, so I picked the ones that were important to me, phoned friends and told them to take however many they wanted. I rarely feel as though this was a bad idea as at least I know they've gone on to happy homes.

The remainder of my CD collection (which is still fairly big by most people's standards) currently sits behind a sofa in the spare room. Still, I sometimes glance at it and my eye picks out the spine of an album - usually one I'd just forgotten to play in a long time as it's squirrelled away in the depths of my hard drive - and I think to myself "I should give that another spin some time soon". This is testament to the physical format really. I have so much digital music now that my brain is ultimately accustomed to seeing certain folders in certain places and therefore skips and neglects them. So I always just scroll past, say, the Smashing Pumpkins folder, never thinking about whether or not I'd like to play anything from them. I forget that I used to really enjoy tracks off of Mellon Collie and how jarring I found it when they released Adore. Their entire career is reduced to a folder on my hard drive labelled "smashing pumpkins" and so I scroll through.

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:01 (twelve years ago)

I'm intrigued, Mike, by your mention of that fact that "CDs don't scrobble"; why is being able to scrobble important to you? (And is scrobble in the OED yet? It should be.)

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:03 (twelve years ago)

I've been on a panel with Graham Jones, author of Last Shop Standing. Enormously likeable guy. DL, I can tell that you've fallen under his influence - but he's such a dedicated and passionate advocate of independent record stores, that it's impossible not to!

Yeah he seemed like a really nice bloke. He did a Q&A along with the shop staff which ended up getting kind of heated! Think the bit that affected me most was how at the end he explained that two of the shops in the documentary had had to close down since it was filmed, and that one of the owners was now living with his sister having lost his entire livelihood.

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:04 (twelve years ago)

I dread to think, but it's probably close to, if not over 100 records. I'm actually trying to cut down the size of my collection, not expand it so I'm not really sure how it happened. A couple of times I sorted though cheap bins and bought about 20 for a pound or so which has pushed it up and most of those have been gambles which haven't made the cut.

I've probably sold 40-50 old records on Discogs this year too.

Chewshabadoo, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:05 (twelve years ago)

iPhone doesn't scrobble either these days. At least mine hasn't for at least a year. I do like Last.FM but it has so many flaws that it doesn't work as well as it should. It would be great to make it that bit less buggy and more communal.

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:07 (twelve years ago)

Right, read the thread properly now, I'd say new or reissues, I've bought maybe 30 12" singles and around 5-10 lps. A few of those may have been bootlegs though, or at the very least sketchy licensing so the money may not have ended up in the artists pocket.

Chewshabadoo, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:08 (twelve years ago)

Think I've probably bought about 30 albums this year which is less than usual as we moved house and I was trying to cut down a bit.

Of those 30, I estimate at least half still have their cellophane wrappers on as they were albums I'd already downloaded when they leaked.

groovypanda, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:14 (twelve years ago)

Why is being able to scrobble important to you?

I like having a record of what I've listened to, and how often. Mmm, stats. I particularly like having rolling "most played tracks over past 3/6/12 months" counts.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:19 (twelve years ago)

I hate stats.

comedy is unnatural and abhorrent (Scik Mouthy), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:26 (twelve years ago)

If Scrobble actually worked properly for me it'd be great for EOY lists

This Is... The Police (dog latin), Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:28 (twelve years ago)

I play albums on CD in my CD player and also play them (silently) on Spotify so that they scrobble. Also that way I'm contributing the tiny amount of money on top of whatever they got from my CD purchase.

if, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:28 (twelve years ago)

22 new albums including two boxed sets - nearly all CDs, the only records I've bought new this year have been reissues of older stuff. I prefer buying vinyl but new releases can be too pricey a lot of the time.

It'd be 100+ if we were counting secondhand purchases, I've bought a lot of cheap old stuff on both CD and vinyl.

Gavin, Leeds, Tuesday, 2 October 2012 10:31 (twelve years ago)

I've bought about 30 vinyl records too, as well as maybe half a dozen CDs, but I think this may be the last year I buy any CDs.

Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 10:37 (eleven years ago)

CD albums: 54
Vinyl LPs: 10
12" singles: 8
7" singles: 5
Cassettes: 1
All new/recent releases.

As for downloads:
Standalone tracks: 25 (some back catalogue)
Single/EP bundles: 10
Albums: 2

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 10:43 (eleven years ago)

25 new CDs and about 250 albums on vinyl (some new, but mostly charity shop finds)

rp boo bryson (NickB), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 10:44 (eleven years ago)

A more interesting question might be... how much music did you buy at all? Some years I just used Spotify and free DJ mixes and that was enough to give me a blend of old and new. Bought more digital music this year than I have for a long time (3/4 albums, just buying stuff digitally never really a thing for me except high quality mp3s when I was DJing more.)

Legitimate space tale (LocalGarda), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 10:48 (eleven years ago)

Half a dozen CD albums
30-odd vinyl albums (mostly secondhand)
10 vinyl singles/EPs (ditto)

I signed up for eMusic for a while so I ended up buying maybe ten mp3 albums from that and I've bought a lot of one-off singles/tracks through there or iTunes.

Gavin, Leeds, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 10:56 (eleven years ago)

approx 300 cds.

(including lots of boxsets .. )

of which only 10 or so are 2013 releases.

oh, and a couple of 12"

mark e, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:03 (eleven years ago)

I mostly only buy downloads if they're by local acts who I want to support, or if I'm burning a CD for an occasion, and am short of a few tracks. I've flirted with vinyl this year - our local independent shop is run as a social enterprise by a homelessness charity, and they do what they do very well indeed - but the format hasn't really re-stuck, and I've been disappointed by the pressing quality on a few occasions. Can't see myself stopping buying CD albums any time soon. We've got good hi-fis; they sound better. And I can play them in the car. As ever, a large majority of my CD purchases were trialled first on Spotify. I'd still be buying CD singles if they were available; as they aren't, I stream them instead.

mike t-diva, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:04 (eleven years ago)

Let me think: Have I bought any minidisc albums this year?

No.

Mark G, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:04 (eleven years ago)

This year: 1 LP as a gift for a family member, and a Richard Pryor CD/DVD set for myself.

Non-corporeal, I think I only renewed my emusic subscription, which should be 1080 tracks.

zanarkand bozo (abanana), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:13 (eleven years ago)

quite a few dozen releases in various formats but have really tried to curb it in the last few months cos I'm pissing myself off buying things and then having them sit there barely listened to

now to press submit and inevitably discover that I wrote almost the same post itt last year

screaming lord, such opinion (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:41 (eleven years ago)

the answer is... sort of

hmm

screaming lord, such opinion (DJ Mencap), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:43 (eleven years ago)

it's down again this year, from about 55 things to 45 things.

a lot fewer magazine-mounted cds this year too, i notice.

and lots more dvds... (b&w japanese films, american tv)

koogs, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 11:58 (eleven years ago)

Around 120 CDs and a pair of LPs. I use Spotify to check stuff out, too, and bought around 20-30 digital tracks.

I guess I'm privileged because I have a house and a room full of my music.

Or I'm just old and I just prefer physical copies, liner notes, making my own rips and feeling like I'm making an investment in something vital to me.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:32 (eleven years ago)

I don't have the exact number, it's somewhere between 50 to 75 CDs.

I prefer owning things in a physical format because the Internet can be taken away and hard drives can die; I'm only losing my CD collection if there's a fire.

SHAUN (DJP), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:38 (eleven years ago)

because it's so bad no burglar would steal it? ;)

pfunkboy (Algerian Goalkeeper), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:39 (eleven years ago)

A burglar did steal all of my CDs and tapes the summer between high school and college when I was in Germany and my parents' insurance policy replaced 95% of everything; basically anything they could find, they got me a copy of. (It helped that I had a database of all of the music I owned at the time.) So really, I'm not losing anything that isn't out of print even in a fire. (note to self: restart that music collection database)

SHAUN (DJP), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:41 (eleven years ago)

If my records got stolen, there is no way I would use the insurance money to replace half the same stuff.

Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:50 (eleven years ago)

The policy didn't give a lump sum, apparently.

SHAUN (DJP), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:51 (eleven years ago)

Oh. I know nothing about how insurance works.

Eyeball Kicks, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:55 (eleven years ago)

i bought some vinyl records. let's say...10 records.

festival culture (Jordan), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 14:59 (eleven years ago)

I bought 95 CDs (or full-album downloads). Of those, 25 were boxes or sets of more than 2 discs.

Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:40 (eleven years ago)

is anyone else finding themselves buying more CDs lately? it's often cheaper than buying the download now

My Chief Keef Keef (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:42 (eleven years ago)

Biggest thing I bought this year: Cannibal Corpse's Dead Human Collection: 25 Years of Death Metal. 13 CDs (their entire studio discography to date, plus a new live album), 1 LP (said live album), a calendar, and 12" x 12" prints of all their album covers. You know, for hanging up in your living room.

Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:42 (eleven years ago)

I like Amazon's "AutoRip" service - buy the CD, get an instant free download.

Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:42 (eleven years ago)

CD albums: 300+ (about 80% new releases/20% catalog)
Vinyl LPs: 12 (all catalog, used)
12" singles: 0
7" singles: 1
Cassettes: 0

As for downloads:
Standalone tracks: 2 or 3
Single/EP bundles: 4-5 (all new releases)
Albums: 5 or 6 (all new releases)

an enormous bolus of flatulence (jon /via/ chi 2.0), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:44 (eleven years ago)

I like Amazon's "AutoRip" service - buy the CD, get an instant free download.

Sometimes the CD+Download is cheaper than the Download

Mark G, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:45 (eleven years ago)

my discogs account reports that i bought about 110 or so records this year. most of those were used, but maybe 10 or so were new.

Karl Malone, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:48 (eleven years ago)

is anyone else finding themselves buying more CDs lately? it's often cheaper than buying the download now

Especially given how common budget boxsets are now. I picked up a few of those this year (Slowdive, Fields of the Nephilim, Thin Lizzy), and lots of used CDs. I probably bought about 100 CDs, more than ever before.

jmm, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:48 (eleven years ago)

At this point I would not care if "physical" music were to just disappear altogether but the idea of the same thing happening to physical books horrifies me. Probably something to do with with physical music formats being a brief historical anomaly that we just happened to coincide with.

Matt DC, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:49 (eleven years ago)

Like we installed a power amp and a massive pair of speakers at the end and I ended up playing the same album on both CD and streamed MP3 and the difference was pretty much imperceptible.

Matt DC, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:51 (eleven years ago)

the new low priced outboard USB DACs like the Dragonfly and Nuforce are pretty amazing, if you listen to music on headphones a lot you should totally get one

My Chief Keef Keef (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:56 (eleven years ago)

is anyone else finding themselves buying more CDs lately? it's often cheaper than buying the download now

Especially given how common budget boxsets are now. I picked up a few of those this year (Slowdive, Fields of the Nephilim, Thin Lizzy), and lots of used CDs. I probably bought about 100 CDs, more than ever before.

this is me.

bargain bins + lots of budget boxsets (simple minds, roxy music, bread, j&mc, byrds, nephilim, janis joplin, neil young, International DeeJay Gigolos vol 1-5, the doors, scott walker, Philadelphia International Records: The 40th Anniversary Box Set, green day, 10cc !)

mark e, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 15:57 (eleven years ago)

was looking for some decent box sets to round off the year. picked up the cheap 5cd bauhaus thing and the berlin period bowie box (zeit) but haven't seen any others that i liked...

koogs, Tuesday, 10 December 2013 16:04 (eleven years ago)

How many English did you marry this year

i am curious #yolo (wins), Tuesday, 10 December 2013 16:27 (eleven years ago)

i have bought 10 CDs this year. i mainly listen to new things via Spotify.

Bee OK, Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:33 (eleven years ago)

just bought a physical copy of K Michelle.

the objections to Drake from non-REAL HIPHOP people (Alfred, Lord Sotosyn), Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:40 (eleven years ago)

none? i think?

j., Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:51 (eleven years ago)

Think I bought a single CD, at a show.

ruth rendell writing as (askance johnson), Saturday, 14 December 2013 20:58 (eleven years ago)

I can't remember if I bought it before or after my earlier posts in this thread, but I just got another one of those "Original Album Collection" 5CD boxes (this is my sixth) from Amazon. This one has Dwight Yoakam's first five albums.

Humorist (horse) (誤訳侮辱), Saturday, 14 December 2013 21:12 (eleven years ago)

I got one of the Real Gone CD set of 19 Art Blakey records. Pretty much only listened to that for half the year.

Montgomery Burns' Jazz (Tarfumes The Escape Goat), Saturday, 14 December 2013 21:47 (eleven years ago)

I tallied everything up and got these results: I acquired 33 CDs, 31 LPs and got a box of 15 cassettes for free. Quite surprised that the total was as high as 79.

president of the people's republic of antarctica (Arctic Mindbath), Saturday, 14 December 2013 22:15 (eleven years ago)

Zero, I'm pretty sure.

jaymc, Saturday, 14 December 2013 22:17 (eleven years ago)

no comment

CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Saturday, 14 December 2013 23:17 (eleven years ago)

49 new, 21 old CDs.

I can still taste the Taboo in my mouth when I hear those songs (Scik Mouthy), Sunday, 15 December 2013 18:59 (eleven years ago)

I bought a used promo copy of a Howling Hex album for $1 the other day, so that makes 1 CD this year, while proving that Drag City was right to stay off of Spotify.

dlp9001, Sunday, 15 December 2013 23:31 (eleven years ago)

comment:

so so much. so so much more than i want to admit or can excuse. a couple hundred LPs, more than half of them new. 40 or 50 cds. 2 45s and 2 cassette tapes.

CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Sunday, 15 December 2013 23:36 (eleven years ago)

a quick guess: ~20 CDs, 2 LPs, £50 worth of downloads and 12 months of Spotify subscription

freemen (on the) space (seandalai), Sunday, 15 December 2013 23:42 (eleven years ago)

oh yeah, maybe $50 in downloads and half a year's spotify

CANONICAL artists, etc., etc. (contenderizer), Sunday, 15 December 2013 23:45 (eleven years ago)

Can we conclude anything from this thread? We're a subset of rabid music fans and many respondants said they didn't spend any money aside from streaming services. Has your appetite for music been sated? Do you still have a want-list? Personally, I have an "I might buy it" list but I no longer have a "things to check out" list as digital sources have allowed me to catch up on it. ILM is most often my source of things I look into.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Monday, 16 December 2013 01:11 (eleven years ago)

I probably bought 50 or so LPs. Used to buy a lot more before moving to New York, don't generally care for the record shopping here. This was the first year I ever bought used records online, and I did more ordering online for LPs in general than ever.

Mark, Monday, 16 December 2013 01:27 (eleven years ago)


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