It's happened. The straw that broke the camel's back. My shelving is herniating under the load of a couple of thousand cds. The overflow can be found in every room of the house. I feel like Captain Kirk on the besieged Starship Enterprise when the Tribbles have invaded.
Of course, if I did the sensible thing and acknowledged that I really don't need 12 complete Beethoven Cycles, 6 Mahler 6ths, a partridge in a Pear tree... if I threw out the duplicates, then I would have no problem.
I've tried pruning my collection in the past. Given the heave-ho to discs that haven't been played for more than a decade. It seems like as soon as I donate them, I start missing them immediately, and I have to listen to them, which sometimes means repurchasing them....
Yes, I know this is a clinical illness, and no normal person would understand. However, here I am among friends, fellow collectors, so I can stand up and proclaim "Hello, I am Richard, and I am a Classical-CD-aholic."
My latest scheme for saving space and my wife's sanity is to do what so many have done. Move many of the discs to a hard drive (uncompressed). I plan to leave the ones that I really like as CDs (along with SACDs, Blu Rays, DVD-As) but move the ones that haven't been played in years--but that I can't bear to part with--to a hard drive.
So what's the problem? I'm computer and technophobic. I have to deal with IT issues at my place of employment, and as a small business owner I have had to solve most of them myself, and it is freaking painful. The last thing that I want to do is come home
and have another myriad of IT issues. I have read many articles on this, but each one leaves me more fearful and confused than the last.
One of my major issues is Classical Music Metadata. The whole metadata system is set up for pop music and works terribly for CM.
My first feeble attempts to to this were using itunes, and I got tired quickly of having to retype everything in a format that might make sense.
Have others joined this brave new world? Any words of advice?
Of course, if I did the sensible thing and acknowledged that I really don't need 12 complete Beethoven Cycles, 6 Mahler 6ths, a partridge in a Pear tree... if I threw out the duplicates, then I would have no problem.
I've tried pruning my collection in the past. Given the heave-ho to discs that haven't been played for more than a decade. It seems like as soon as I donate them, I start missing them immediately, and I have to listen to them, which sometimes means repurchasing them....
Yes, I know this is a clinical illness, and no normal person would understand. However, here I am among friends, fellow collectors, so I can stand up and proclaim "Hello, I am Richard, and I am a Classical-CD-aholic."
My latest scheme for saving space and my wife's sanity is to do what so many have done. Move many of the discs to a hard drive (uncompressed). I plan to leave the ones that I really like as CDs (along with SACDs, Blu Rays, DVD-As) but move the ones that haven't been played in years--but that I can't bear to part with--to a hard drive.
So what's the problem? I'm computer and technophobic. I have to deal with IT issues at my place of employment, and as a small business owner I have had to solve most of them myself, and it is freaking painful. The last thing that I want to do is come home
and have another myriad of IT issues. I have read many articles on this, but each one leaves me more fearful and confused than the last.
One of my major issues is Classical Music Metadata. The whole metadata system is set up for pop music and works terribly for CM.
My first feeble attempts to to this were using itunes, and I got tired quickly of having to retype everything in a format that might make sense.
Have others joined this brave new world? Any words of advice?
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