Originally posted by visualnickmos
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Culling CDs
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... there is of course wisdom in that approach. Another view, however, might be that one is building up a 'library' to which you can refer whenever you need. In the same way as the books I have acquired over the years.
And, yes, you may have 'a change in your musical interests' - but equally your interests may veer back again. And anyway you might wish to listen again to something which once had such appeal for you.
I find a certain satisfaction looking around the shelves of books and CDs, a reflection of current and previous interests, the worm-casts of my life. It's unlikely that I'll re-read much of the Fantômas or Jules Verne volumes - but looking at them I can recall the thrill of getting them and racing thro' them the first times round. I may be less enthralled now by Soler or Déodat de Séverac than I once was - but I never know if one day I might not wish to plunge back in again.
I never cull...
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Didn't Umberto Eco write an essay about the virtues of having more books than he'd ever read?
Well, it applies to CDs, too. For me, I had a massive chunk of my collection involuntarily culled by burglars.
But I should start systematically listening to my CDs, though - instead of listening to the same few CDs again and again - or the temptation of youtube, which contains so much these days and of course is more easily pausable to return to long works where I left them, compared with CDs...
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Originally posted by Joseph K View Post
Well, it applies to CDs, too. For me, I had a massive chunk of my collection involuntarily culled by burglars.
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Originally posted by Serial_Apologist View PostMore likely, though, they will have broken in in the hope of making money from the ill-begotten booty.
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The eternal culling dilemma rears itself again.
The Mackerras Czech music box that Bryn recommended has just arrived, so that means I now have duplicates of the Martinu Field Mass, Double Concerto, and Fresques, which feature in it.
But the single CD booklet has the words of the Field Mass in it, which of course the bargain box booklet doesn't.
So that CD probably won't make it to the culled pile.
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostThe eternal culling dilemma rears itself again.
The Mackerras Czech music box that Bryn recommended has just arrived, so that means I now have duplicates of the Martinu Field Mass, Double Concerto, and Fresques, which feature in it.
But the single CD booklet has the words of the Field Mass in it, which of course the bargain box booklet doesn't.
So that CD probably won't make it to the culled pile.
One box I bought used ( The Lou Harrison Gamelan 4 CD set, ) had the booklet very neatly chopped up into single sheets.I will not be pushed, filed, stamped, indexed, briefed, debriefed or numbered. My life is my own.
I am not a number, I am a free man.
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Originally posted by teamsaint View PostI sometimes take out the booklet/cover/whatever and keep it in the box set, if there is room, which does at least free up a space on the shelf.
One box I bought used ( The Lou Harrison Gamelan 4 CD set, ) had the booklet very neatly chopped up into single sheets.
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Originally posted by Joseph K View PostDidn't Umberto Eco write an essay about the virtues of having more books than he'd ever read?It isn't given us to know those rare moments when people are wide open and the lightest touch can wither or heal. A moment too late and we can never reach them any more in this world.
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One of the great joys of being married is going to a concert with a wife who hasn't heard, (or indeed played!), the standard repertoire a few times. So, we are are going to hear Walton's 'Belshazzer's Feast' on Friday played by the magnificent RSNO & Chorus.
And so it's nice to be able to pull out the cd I bought in 1989 of the LSO and LSO Chorus under Richard Hickox. It's been a LONG time since this cd was played but there it is.
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