durdencommatyler wrote:Team Strat.
you and me is like peas and carrots
durdencommatyler wrote:Team Strat.
Strat wrote:durdencommatyler wrote:Team Strat.
you and me is like peas and carrots
I know it sounds trite but that description really does ring true for the experience of first listening through my newly-purchased Sennheiser headphones back in 2003 or 2004. It really was as though I hadn't heard any of my favourite music before - I immediately wanted to hear everything I'd ever listened to all over again so I could absorb all of the details I'd previously been unaware of.Kevin Davis wrote:All I mean to say is that I've never had that experience of listening to new headphones or a new stereo system and suddenly feeling like I'm hearing recorded sound again for the first time, as though all my listening prior to my receipt of x piece of gadgetry was a sham, which is not uncommon verbiage from audio geeks when discussing listening accessories.
I feel you on this. I can't tolerate low-bitrate mp3s -- they remind me of watching an old VHS tape that was made from a copy of a copy of a copy on a cassette that's been re-used and "taped over" so many times that all the resolution is dead. I rarely seek out leaks but in the event that one finds its way to me, I will usually choose patience over succumbing to a low quality rip. To me, having the intrinsic value of the sound file compromised in some way is not the same as listening to a lossless version of the recording through non-audiophile gear, or on one format over another, or whatever. Again, I don't claim that no difference exists from one consumer product to the next (and I have certainly had headphones and speakers over the years that just feel "off" somehow), but overall I feel like I've been blessed with good enough ears to make up for what I am unwilling to spend on expensive equipment. Maybe I just haven't found that magical piece of gear yet, who knows.Strat wrote:This all sounds very apparent to me when I listen to a leaked album that may have leaked at a lower rate/crappy quality. Ill get used to this sound of the album. Then it will actually be released and I hear it in its full glory.
This was all well and good until we decided to move house - holy shit, boxes full of CDs weigh a ton.Birds in Hell wrote:Guess what? Having lived with this question for a while, I've decided that I'm sticking with CDs and will probably dedicate myself to slowly picking up a good percentage of the things I've downloaded in FLAC over the last few years. Repurchasing things I've already bought the digital version of seems redundant but that's the position that I find myself in.Birds in Hell wrote:After selling/donating/junking every bit of vinyl I had, as well as a few hundred CDs, I now have a shelf with the remaining 500 or so CDs organised alphabetically.
Guess what? Now it's done it all feels kind of redundant and I can easily imagine a time when I'll get rid of the rest and move to digital only. Unlike books, where I feel as though the tangible object remains clearly preferable to the digital alternative, I really don't have any lingering fondness for hanging onto my music in a physical form. In every respect, a lossless digital file seems like the better option.
How about you, OB?
Wait, so from 300 CDs, you were able to buy a new iPhone and renovate your bathroom? What was your average selling price? Like $10 or so?LetMeSleep wrote:Spenno, after not having my CDs for over five years I haven't really missed them. I'm currently selling most of them but I imagine I'll keep 100plus. I've sold about 300 so far and there have only been a handful that have been tough to actually put in an envelope. But I've got a new iPhone and I've done a bathroom renovation from the cash.

I love this.Higgs wrote:I have started a big project to organise my digital music collection. I'm leaning heavily on Musicbrainz Picard to help me correctly tag all my stuff and grab album art so it sits in my Plex server nice and neat (Plex is a storage program that plays through Plexamp - an app on my phone).
I started last week and through trial and error have had mixed results but am getting there.
Last night I had a set back though as suddenly Plex decided to rename artists so I suddenly had 2,500 albums by The Ronettes!
I decided to nuke my library and re-import only the albums I'd already tagged and force Plex to only look at the tags I'd created (left unchecked it makes it's own decisions, kinda messing up the hard work I'm doing).
So far it's looking like a thing of beauty. Long way to go but I'm excited for the end result now.
This digital media tagging is a journey, I tell ya. In the end I hope to have my digital library pristine and perfect.
What a fucking dork I am...
96583UP wrote:i recently bought travel-size packets of metamucil
now when i regular i can promote regularity