Originally posted by umslopogaas
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Will you outlive your CD collection?
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostOh let that be a vinters. Always look on the bright side of...etc
Absolutely - I'm not yet ready to tell myself I'd better not buy that CD (/book/DVD/bottle of whisky/ticket for concert/film/theatre) on the grounds that I might clogpop before it arrives in the post - but the rather melancholic OP does sort-of lead to less-than-jolly spirits.
It's outliving people I love that's the real bummer for me.[FONT=Comic Sans MS][I][B]Numquam Satis![/B][/I][/FONT]
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post
Absolutely - I'm not yet ready to tell myself I'd better not buy that CD (/book/DVD/bottle of whisky/ticket for concert/film/theatre) on the grounds that I might clogpop before it arrives in the post - but the rather melancholic OP does sort-of lead to less-than-jolly spirits.
It's outliving people I love that's the real bummer for me.
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Going off at a tangent, I have a use for CDs which I know I will never want to hear (e.g. the Donny Osmond compiliation that somehow got onto our shelves).
If strung up on boats they are an extremely effective seagull deterrent because of the light flashing on the shiny surface. Gardeners also use them to keep pigeons off their broccoli/sprouts/beans or whatever.
Does that fall into the green banana category?
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I can't see myself outliving my CDs. Looking at the Complete Mozart Edition alone I'm reminded of time passing and secretly hope that Amazon is going to cancel the Complete Strauss Opera box to save me agonising over whether to cancel or not. Another good decision might be to keep well clear of the Bargain section. HoweverMy life, each morning when I dress, is four and twenty hours less. (J Richardson)
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Originally posted by ferneyhoughgeliebte View Post"Green bananas"???
Tho' I did have a moment a while back when given an opportunity to buy some claret en primeur - an attractive offer, until I considered the drinking window suggested (2040-2050) - even if I were still alive, would my taste-buds still be able to appreciate?
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I wouldn't call my CD buying systematic in any way but in recent years I've tended to buy a good number of boxed sets of those artists (particularly conductors and composers) whom I have seen and/or met and most especially in the works or composer I saw them perform. This has happily coincided with the availability of some very cheap sets.
With this reasoning I've bought virtually all of the sets featuring Haitink, Tennstedt, Karajan, Böhm, Sinopoli, most of Abbado, Wand, Kubelik etc, etc. This also applies to single discs and also to still living conductors and still continues eg Barenboim in Elgar and Bruckner. Still longing for a complete Solti edition.
The boxes with Boult and Klemperer are there because I really, really wish I'd seen them.
I made a rule quite some time ago not to buy CDs of music that was 'obscure' or 'neglected' on the grounds of cost, space and time and have mostly, but not always, stuck to it. YouTube exists for anything I may wish to try before I sink any money into something that I might not like."The sound is the handwriting of the conductor" - Bernard Haitink
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Originally posted by ardcarp View PostGardeners also use them [Cds] to keep pigeons off their broccoli/sprouts/beans or whatever.Last edited by Zucchini; 15-06-17, 21:18.
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