Originally posted by gradus
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Classical music on LP and CD
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostDo tell. My understanding is that vinyl disc are very difficult to recycle and end up going to landfill:
https://recordplayerexpert.com/vinyl-record-disposal/
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Originally posted by Pulcinella View PostSome enterprising soul should devise a recycling product out of them to be used for pothole fill, not land fill!
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Originally posted by hmvman View PostMost of the classical records end up in the skip.
However, this sounds more like it. Here is the "newly arrived" stuff. Might be worth contacting even if you're not near Bristol.
Home page.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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Originally posted by MickyD View PostThat's very sad to hear. I love to see CDs on my shelves in the same way as books - there is something rather comforting and reassuring about them.
I came to CD late in 1998 (digital intercourse began in 1998, which wasn't quite too late for me...)... so it still feels special to buy a new one; several companies make a great deal of the artwork and presentation now. (The new Levin Mozart has the hardback-book style, with lovely photos and analyses of the piano used...).
Vinyl was never big with me, either physically or emotionally, couldn't afford many and usually borrowed library stock of wildly variable conditions. I sold what I had to a stockbroker in the early 90s, so I could afford a much-needed winter coat. He saw them as more than a commodity at the time (probably...I hope...), but never played them much in his Belgravia or Paris apartments. Later he said that music wasn't really a part of his life anymore. I never knew what became of those records...
Principle: sound and presentational quality rules for me, online or off, but - just be very eclectic, really, access and enjoy and love your music any which way, hang loose.....Last edited by jayne lee wilson; 16-03-23, 20:22.
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Originally posted by MickyD View PostThat's very sad to hear. I love to see CDs on my shelves in the same way as books - there is something rather comforting and reassuring about them.
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If it’s any consolation there does still appear to be a market, admittedly small, for certain highly regarded classical recordings on vinyl. Now a regular listener to Record Review I sometimes search online for something I like the sound of. I don’t always agree with the recommendations but then it’s a good thing we don’t all like the same things, isn’t it. Having listened to AMcG’s feature on Shostakovich Quartet No 8 on 21 January and perused the opinions of esteemed fellow forumites (naturally) I started looking for hte earliest Borodin Quartet recordings I could find. The search brought up a 1967 Ace of Diamonds vinyl LP of quartets 2 and 8 for under a fiver. ‘Bargain!’ I thought, and put a low bid on thinking it unlikely that anybody else would be interested. How wrong I was. ‘Oh well, the grapes probably tasted sour anyway … ‘ thought Vixen Sharp-Ears. The idea of listening to the quartet in the same recording medium, crackles and all, as the composer himself and the performers who premiered the piece, just appealed to me, that’s all.
It’s heartening to note that there is, in fact, the identical LP (Decca/Ace of Diamonds SDD 156 ED1) on offer at £25. Described as ‘Near Mint Condition’And the tune ends too soon for us all
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Originally posted by Constantbee View PostIf it’s any consolation there does still appear to be a market, admittedly small, for certain highly regarded classical recordings on vinyl. Now a regular listener to Record Review I sometimes search online for something I like the sound of. I don’t always agree with the recommendations but then it’s a good thing we don’t all like the same things, isn’t it. Having listened to AMcG’s feature on Shostakovich Quartet No 8 on 21 January and perused the opinions of esteemed fellow forumites (naturally) I started looking for hte earliest Borodin Quartet recordings I could find. The search brought up a 1967 Ace of Diamonds vinyl LP of quartets 2 and 8 for under a fiver. ‘Bargain!’ I thought, and put a low bid on thinking it unlikely that anybody else would be interested. How wrong I was. ‘Oh well, the grapes probably tasted sour anyway … ‘ thought Vixen Sharp-Ears. The idea of listening to the quartet in the same recording medium, crackles and all, as the composer himself and the performers who premiered the piece, just appealed to me, that’s all.
It’s heartening to note that there is, in fact, the identical LP (Decca/Ace of Diamonds SDD 156 ED1) on offer at £25. Described as ‘Near Mint Condition’
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Originally posted by Bryn View PostDo tell. My understanding is that vinyl disc are very difficult to recycle and end up going to landfill:
https://recordplayerexpert.com/vinyl-record-disposal/
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
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Originally posted by Petrushka View PostThis isn't me, I promise, but it could just as well be...
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkzsN9R8hn4 Is it anyone on here?
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Originally posted by Petrushka View Post
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