
what else?

zephhh wrote:
what else?
myxylpyx wrote:dam bro dats sick... off to the garden to eat some worms now.

but what does it being on vinyl add that isn't already on the cd the tunes are mastered from?jolly wailer wrote:I don't understand your question.
any and all music is superior on vinyl. especially computer beats.
SoundcloudAntlionUK wrote:fuck you SNH
You may argue about vinyl's superiorness, but man, cds are just poop.kp mike wrote:the people bigging up vinyl are usually audio-snobs
cd's ftw.
You've got issues. Your a rich troubled manesfandyar wrote:hell yeah!
sometimes I look at my vinyl and wonder what else I could have bought with all that money. its pretty much my huge sink, i spend somewhere like 200-400 a month on the stuff. but i also lay naked on the floor and cover myself in records.... i know you guys do it too.
You know how FLAC and Wave files are "lossless"? They're not. They're lossless in the sense that nothing practically discernible is lost in the myriad of zeros and ones. They're lossless so far as a computer will practically permit. A music file is a complicated reconstruction of sound using no or yes interpreted by your sound card: a digital translator that is only capable of as much as your music file.Pistonsbeneath wrote:but what does it being on vinyl add that isn't already on the cd the tunes are mastered from?
yes but its probably mastered for vinyl from a cd in the first place and it cannot simply add sound that isn't there....EMANCE wrote:You know how FLAC and Wave files are "lossless"? They're not. They're lossless in the sense that nothing practically discernible is lost in the myriad of zeros and ones. They're lossless so far as a computer will practically permit. A music file is a complicated reconstruction of sound using no or yes interpreted by your sound card: a digital translator that is only capable of as much as your music file.Pistonsbeneath wrote:but what does it being on vinyl add that isn't already on the cd the tunes are mastered from?
Vinyl is lossless in real life. There are no gaps. There is no binary. Just a needle running over an infinitely reducible collision-free groove. Sound as sound is in real life, not a digital representation of sound. When someone bangs a drum head, that is sound. When a computer outputs a recording of someone banging that same drum head, that is not sound. It is a reproduction of sound. Digital is the latter. Vinyl is the former. Smooth as..
To answer your question, "What is gained by pressing music constructed in a digital environment to vinyl?" Purity of sound.
the article that billboard.com was talking about is from the latest RIAA stats released this week. read more here.prestonwatson wrote:Hi Seckle,
I am a newbie who have just join today. I agree to your point that the CD sales are going down and digital is breaking records. Thank you for providing the link but unfortunately due to some technical reason, I am unable to open it. Anyway I will do it sometime later. But keep us update with such information ever. Cheers.
seckle wrote:http://76.74.24.142/D5664E44-B9F7-69E0- ... EB6EF2.pdfRIAA wrote: In 2008, it's reported that 1.88 million vinyl albums were purchased, which is the highest number since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking LP sales in 1991. Additionally, vinyl sales rose 14% between 2006 and 2007, from 858,000 to 990,000. And the sales figures for 2009 will surpass the number for 2008 with ease. In comparison, CD sales have nosedived over the past three years, from 553.4 million in 2006 to 360.6 million in 2008. MP3 sales grew from 32.6 million to 65.8 million during the same time period, according to SoundScan.
More people purchased vinyl records in 2008 than they have in almost 20 years, according to the Recording Industry Association of America.
Progression of LP/EP sales in millions
•$2005 $14.2
•$2006 $15.7
•$2007 $22.9
•$2008 $46.2
•$2009 $56.7
^taken from here below
http://www.riaa.com/keystatistics.php
fused forces wrote:djake wrote:i love vinyl!
Interesting question.rob sparx wrote:Anyone know what genre of music is driving the vinyl comeback?
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