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Audio and Video Talk
Vinyl
High Definition Vinyl
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<blockquote data-quote="JonnyP" data-source="post: 806132" data-attributes="member: 17918"><p>There are still artists recording to tape, then following the full analogue path and those recording to digital and going the full digital path. I expect both will survive for a good few more years. Bootlegging digital formats is much easier regardless of file size and quality, and easier than getting tape nowadays (remember when we killed music by home taping? We gave it a paper cut compared to the blood-letting streaming and the internet have caused).</p><p></p><p>I seldom buy new vinyl, and usually from analogue mastering etc (it supports the artists with higher royalties, makes many happy that they made a physical format, and gives me pleasure both aural and visual). I won't be subscribing to a streaming service any day soon (as already opined, cannot usually find what I like).</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="JonnyP, post: 806132, member: 17918"] There are still artists recording to tape, then following the full analogue path and those recording to digital and going the full digital path. I expect both will survive for a good few more years. Bootlegging digital formats is much easier regardless of file size and quality, and easier than getting tape nowadays (remember when we killed music by home taping? We gave it a paper cut compared to the blood-letting streaming and the internet have caused). I seldom buy new vinyl, and usually from analogue mastering etc (it supports the artists with higher royalties, makes many happy that they made a physical format, and gives me pleasure both aural and visual). I won't be subscribing to a streaming service any day soon (as already opined, cannot usually find what I like). [/QUOTE]
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Audio and Video Talk
Vinyl
High Definition Vinyl
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