I'm sure my audiophile uncle would not agree with my feelings on the sound quality, but I appreciate that I can have all that music without all the clutter!KarenInWA
The good thing about vinyls is, that at the time of their production (1940's to early 1980's)
some of them two to three hundred years old and the sound is just pure magic!
I'm thinking that is why concerts are so EXPENSIVE. The musicians are making no money on CD's.
he rants about the only way musicians can make money is by touring.
Quote from: SooMK on March 04, 2018, 08:51:45 AMhe rants about the only way musicians can make money is by touring.No sympathy from me. I remember when artists could make a living from recording. Three albums a year, each taking about two weeks to record, that is a whole six weeks work a year! Now they have to go out on tour. Perform sets of up to two hours. That is a whole two hours work a day, sometimes as many as three days a week. The poor overworked multi-millionaires. True there are rehearsals, but we are still talking a fraction of what a "real" human being has to do. If they want to complain, then give them a ten hour shift in a factory, five days a week for minimum wage. Let them find out what hard work is like!
Paul, you are forgetting that a lot of those artists also have to WRITE the songs they record, and that takes a hell of a lot longer than a few minutes. It can take months to wdrite a full album
Actually, they don't. When an artist records an album, any money they make goes directly to the recording company to pay recording costs and promotion, among other things. Any money they might get from royalties, which isn't much unless they have a huge hit, or anything they make from performing goes right back to the recording company. If the album is a flop, an artist can go into debt very quickly
It's my understanding that vinyl has returned in a big way.