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What is your primary source audio component- i.e., how do you listen to your tunes?
Comments
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Write-in optionHi res boom box...well until I destroyed it
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Pandora, Spotify, iTrunes, etc from Smart Phone, Laptop, PC, etc.
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone. -
Turntable
Lowest cost way to get audiophile level sound. Way cheaper than vinyl or higher res (than CD) digital files. Streaming MP3s just doesn't sound very good into a decent stereo set up.Pitchfork51 said:
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone. -
Pandora, Spotify, iTrunes, etc from Smart Phone, Laptop, PC, etc.
As an actual duck with tinnitus, the effective range of my hearing blows, so I think mp3s sound greatYellowSnow said:
Lowest cost way to get audiophile level sound. Way cheaper than vinyl or higher res (than CD) digital files. Streaming MP3s just doesn't sound very good into a decent stereo set up.Pitchfork51 said:
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone. -
Turntable
Smarter dudes than me wrote those algorithms and knew most folks would still find the sound fine. Alas I'm cursed with my hearing being still pretty good and being a hi fi geek to boot.AZDuck said:
As an actual duck with tinnitus, the effective range of my hearing blows, so I think mp3s sound greatYellowSnow said:
Lowest cost way to get audiophile level sound. Way cheaper than vinyl or higher res (than CD) digital files. Streaming MP3s just doesn't sound very good into a decent stereo set up.Pitchfork51 said:
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone. -
Pandora, Spotify, iTrunes, etc from Smart Phone, Laptop, PC, etc.YellowSnow said:
I'm cursed with being a geek.AZDuck said:
As an actual duck with tinnitus, the effective range of my hearing blows, so I think mp3s sound greatYellowSnow said:
Lowest cost way to get audiophile level sound. Way cheaper than vinyl or higher res (than CD) digital files. Streaming MP3s just doesn't sound very good into a decent stereo set up.Pitchfork51 said:
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone. -
TurntableI bought a bunch of CDs when Tower Records folded up shop. Had the entire Blue Note catalog for under $50 (retail was probably 100x that).
Pure vinyl now. -
Write-in optionYouTube honestly.
Still have 175 compact discs or so and maybe 30 songs on Google Play. I had ITunes years ago.
If There's a really good song and an artist like Prince vigilantly locks it out of YouTube, I'll pay the $1.36, but the music videyas are fun. -
YellowSnow said:
Smarter dudes than me wrote those algorithms and knew most folks would still find the sound fine. Alas I'm cursed with my hearing being still pretty good and being a hi fi geek to boot.AZDuck said:
As an actual duck with tinnitus, the effective range of my hearing blows, so I think mp3s sound greatYellowSnow said:
Lowest cost way to get audiophile level sound. Way cheaper than vinyl or higher res (than CD) digital files. Streaming MP3s just doesn't sound very good into a decent stereo set up.Pitchfork51 said:
Ummm. Why?YellowSnow said:
For those that still buy CD's (I did until I went all in on Spotify) we are living in a golden age of cheap CD abundance. Think about going into Tower Records near the 7-11 on the Ave un the U District to buy a Led Zeppelin CD in circa 1995ish...you'd be paying $16.99 or about $27.00 in 2016 dollars. Now you can buy that same CD new for like $12.99 and find is used easily for $5 or $6. If I wasn't such a vinyl junkie I would be buying the shit out of all the used CD's in Seattle and have like 5000 in my collection.Intersectional_Dawg said:Abundance.
Old iPod, turntable, cds in the car, streaming on laptop and phone.






