The Death of the Record Collection

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lol “the decoration” please kill me

brimstead, Saturday, 7 March 2020 08:18 (four years ago) link

do you mean like putting whipped cream and other delights on the wall or

brimstead, Saturday, 7 March 2020 08:23 (four years ago) link

Ugghhhhhhhhhhh


https://www.discogs.com/label/788764-Moonshake

brimstead, Saturday, 7 March 2020 08:27 (four years ago) link

can has been the victim of defamation of character

Kate (rushomancy), Saturday, 7 March 2020 11:29 (four years ago) link

Good thing I'm not much of an object fetishist, whether it be for records, books or just about anything else – I simply couldn't afford it. Dematerialization (as the French call it) is what made my obsession with music possible in the first place.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Saturday, 7 March 2020 11:33 (four years ago) link

Spotify is pure evil.

Makes me very sad when friends I know love music and used to support musicians (or even were musicians) send me a link to an album I should hear, or the new "playlist" they made, an it's to Spotify. For less-well-known musicisns. It's like saying to an artis "Love your music! Thsnk you for your art! Glad I could help ensure you'll never visbly be able to scrape a subsistence-level living together from it. Here's $0.003 cents as a heartfelt token of my appreciation."

So yeah, still collecting. Similar to Ned, it's evolved for me into CDs for archival releases and the occasional new album (shops in my city are all too cool for CDs, vinyl-only, which I don't have room to collect), and digital downloads from Bandcamp for current releases. Roughly 250 or so CDs a rear, and 200+ downloads, maybe 3-5 LPs a year for new albums that mean a lot to me.

I know no one will want any of it when I die--but per the original (prescient) post of this thread, I try to get others to buy music, too, by using my collection to make mixes for Musicophilia. Fairly sure I manage to cause a few hundred dollars in sales a year; but presumably at this point most just go add things to their Spotify "library".

Like most things, in the big picture the end of music collections probably doesn't really mean much what with the end of humanity looming etc. But I'll still go to bat for a music collection as one of the few acquisitive obsessions that can (or used to be able to) benefit people beyond the collector. I'm generally of the impression thst the current youngest generations are ethically and politically superior to the older one (mine being somewhere in the middle), but I am actually sad for them that music has become a largely a borrowed-and-will-disapear-on-a-corporate-whim proposition that can't sustain the artists making it.

Soundslike, Saturday, 7 March 2020 12:33 (four years ago) link

Shouldn't have typed that on a phone. Sorry for the typos.

Soundslike, Saturday, 7 March 2020 12:34 (four years ago) link

great post, and otm

Paul Ponzi, Saturday, 7 March 2020 13:54 (four years ago) link

We didn't even know what was missing, or how to find it if the local store/ flea market / etc didn't have it.

― Gerald McBoing-Boing, Saturday, March 7, 2020 3:52 AM

It's slightly before my time but wasn't mail order what people did before internet? I recall when there was still plenty of music magazines, there would be lists/addresses for lots of metal and goth you'd never see in the shops.

So a lot of you don't seem to have younger friends who'd inherit your collection? I'm hoping I could arrange for friends or like minded people to just come and take whatever they wanted before the rest goes to charity shops.
In horror Wilum Pugmire and Avalon Brantley are super niche writers but their family/friends are or were selling off their book collections. Brantley's music collection too.
http://sesqua.net/pugmire-book-sale.html

Robert Adam Gilmour, Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:15 (four years ago) link

I moved across the Atlantic six years ago and sold/"sold" basically everything we owned: furniture, housewares, appliances, obv, but also all books, cds, etc. I had had about 6000 cds I think. I've digital copies of all the music (and most of the books) and I don't intend to replace physical versions of any of them. That's one way to end any collecting urges you may have, if you're looking for an out. I don't have physical collecting urges: I just wanted to hear a lot of music, and buying the physical artifact was the only way. I've never owned any vinyl.

The longest I've ever lived in one place is seven years, and usually it's more like 1-3 years in any given place, so physical collections aren't compatible with how I like to live. I have a few friends who've built vinyl collections but they seem content to live in one place. Mobility and the collecting urge are in tension with one another.

Joey Corona (Euler), Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:28 (four years ago) link

I listen to my records all the time, I have my stereo in the living room and it's kind of open so I just have records playing while I putter around, clean, cook, etc

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:42 (four years ago) link

Yup me too

Οὖτις, Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:59 (four years ago) link

The longest I've ever lived in one place is seven years, and usually it's more like 1-3 years in any given place, so physical collections aren't compatible with how I like to live. I have a few friends who've built vinyl collections but they seem content to live in one place. Mobility and the collecting urge are in tension with one another.

i have about 1,200 or so, and move every 1-3 years, and for some reason i've never felt it to be too annoying to move them! i guess if i had more like 5-10K it would be more of an undertaking. but i keep a stack of record-sized boxes from ULine that i use every for every move, then break down and tuck away in a closet somewhere. the most annoying part of moving records, for me, is trying to decide whether to take apart the goddamn ikea expedit kallax or hire two hunks and a truck to move it up and down stairs with nothing but pure sexiness and a little bit of nerve

But guess what? Nobody gives a toot!😂 (Karl Malone), Saturday, 7 March 2020 16:27 (four years ago) link

talk shit about buying records for the art all you like, you think i wouldn't be proud to have the cover of glohaven's "travel agency" hanging on my wall?

(i don't spotify, i do discogs, but overall i think discogs is worse... 184 people want to buy that record??? really? peak artificial scarcity)

Kate (rushomancy), Saturday, 7 March 2020 16:31 (four years ago) link

Is it a particularly 21st century problem of feeling the need to obtain "everything" by an artist / in a category / of a genre? Because there was a time not long ago when such an idea was more or less impossible. We didn't even know what was missing, or how to find it if the local store/ flea market / etc didn't have it.

You probably know this, but of course record guides like Trouser Press had fairly comprehensive artist discographies, minus singles, and if you were really into a particular artist of any notoriety there were probably books with more complete listings. Around 1992-95, I special ordered a number of things by Can, PiL, the Residents, etc. at my local independent record stores. Domestic releases took 1-2 weeks, imports 6-8. Those import waits felt interminable!

Essential viewing on this topic from Toronto documentarian Alan Zweig (2000), prior to the internet being a serious factor and the vinyl revival:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nkCMSrvOTAo

eatandoph (Neue Jesse Schule), Saturday, 7 March 2020 17:02 (four years ago) link

Yeah, there was mail order (labels had catalogs, you could write to them after reading a review in a zine, etc.); and record store clerks were also a resource, they knew their shit and could place orders for you...

Panic! At The Costco (morrisp), Saturday, 7 March 2020 17:05 (four years ago) link

I listen to my records all the time, I have my stereo in the living room and it's kind of open so I just have records playing while I putter around, clean, cook, etc

― Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:42 (one hour ago) link

Yup me too

― Οὖτις, Saturday, 7 March 2020 15:59 (one hour ago) link

^^^Thirded. First thing I do when I get home from work is turn on the amp and preamp.

Biden my time/Drinking her wine (PBKR), Saturday, 7 March 2020 17:13 (four years ago) link

Same

brimstead, Saturday, 7 March 2020 17:18 (four years ago) link

I've pretty much stopped buying vinyl because pressing inconsistency and fiddliness of replacing cartridges etc. I buy CDs. Probably a couple a week. They're convenient, and now cheap. They sound great on my system - as good as my records. And I can rip them easily for on the go listening.

I will never use online streaming services. As noted above, Spotify is evil. And I like browsing shelves and putting something on. Reading lyric sheets and liner notes - though CD versions of these are sometimes annoyingly tiny...

Duke, Saturday, 7 March 2020 17:33 (four years ago) link

one thing that is great about record collecting now it's YouTube

really saved me a lot of money, you can always listen to the RARE OOP l@@k private press psych record and learn that, no, Appomattox Rising actually just sounds like shit Moby Grape

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Saturday, 7 March 2020 19:00 (four years ago) link

very true, but I still have this irrational impulse where I want to buy (some) records unheard and have that experience of dropping the needle and being surprised. I should probably do more to resist this, but. . .

by the light of the burning Citroën, Saturday, 7 March 2020 19:50 (four years ago) link

It's slightly before my time but wasn't mail order what people did before internet?

That's true, though I never went that route and honestly never saw those particular papers that advertised lists of records.

You probably know this, but of course record guides like Trouser Press had fairly comprehensive artist discographies, minus singles

Also true, and "Trouser Press" was my bible (sometime to my detriment as I took their reviews as gospel and passed on anything they dissed) but they were far from complete and out of date immediately. Therefore, it was *always* necessary to scan through every artist bin lest you miss some new release/import/oddity. Depending on your level of OCD, it could give you the sweats thinking about what *might* be out there.

Now, of course, it's (almost) all at your fingertips, one way or the other. Just be careful what you wish for.

Gerald McBoing-Boing, Saturday, 7 March 2020 21:46 (four years ago) link

It's slightly before my time but wasn't mail order what people did before internet?

Yep. I bought Fushitsusha's Live II from an outfit called Japan Overseas that I initially saw advertised in either Alternative Press or Forced Exposure. I used to buy a lot of stuff from Forced Exposure, too, when they shifted from being a zine to being a distro. Revolver in the Bay Area was great, too.

but also fuck you (unperson), Saturday, 7 March 2020 22:46 (four years ago) link

I remember having to get my mum to sign a cheque for mail orders. Some dodgy 70 Gwen Party LP for example

Duke, Sunday, 8 March 2020 11:35 (four years ago) link

There used to be THREE record shops in my suburb on the outskirts of west London. One was rammed with stock from floor to ceiling and run by an old couple and a hunchback, all of whom seemed bewildered any time a customer came in. I get palpitations when I consider what they probably had in stock but the place was simply unnavigable. They didn't last much beyond my mid-teens; my ordering Sepultura vinyl (which took weeks to come; Beneath the Remains never showed up at all) very probably finished them off. Now's there obviously no record shops, just nail parlours, charity shops and a bizarre number of funeral directors.

Vanishing Point (Chinaski), Sunday, 8 March 2020 11:41 (four years ago) link

Spotify I use walking around on headphones or in the car, but the sound quality is a joke esp after I heard Tidal and (now) Qobuz

Not to be all save-a-Spotify, and I won't claim that this entirely equalizes the difference, but I wonder whether people who hold this opinion are aware that there is a setting in the Spotify app for adjusting the sound quality? If I remember correctly, it is not set to the highest setting by default (probably to save data use).

anatol_merklich, Sunday, 8 March 2020 13:21 (four years ago) link

it was *always* necessary to scan through every artist bin lest you miss some new release/import/oddity.


I think about this a lot, one of the biggest changes in the record store experience I can think of between the pre-internet days and now

turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Sunday, 8 March 2020 13:22 (four years ago) link

i don't feel like i have a process for finding music anymore, i just wander around the internet randomly and see what random strangers have to say. i don't feel like i'm living in the age where "everything is available" because there's lots of stuff i would like that i can't buy or steal anywhere. my wantlist hasn't gotten any shorter even as my "collection" has gotten exponentially larger. something like the vhs vault on archive.org, that's not necessarily music but that speaks to the spirit of our times - vast reams of unwatchable and unwatched crap, no ceiling, towering up into infinity. if anybody finds it it'll probably be some content id bot which will determine, rightly or wrongly, that the media in question belongs to some gargantuan megacorporation and remove it. that sounds more like an infernal jukebox than a celestial one to me.

Kate (rushomancy), Sunday, 8 March 2020 13:27 (four years ago) link

If anyone has a digital copy of the Arditti Quartet's Takemitsu recordings for Fontec Japan, hit me up.

romanesque architect (pomenitul), Sunday, 8 March 2020 13:32 (four years ago) link

setting spotify's sound quality to the highest setting is, i discovered, a good way to nuke your phone's storage because the app is incredibly, staggeringly bad at actually really deleting stuff when you choose "remove download." this has been known for years but they won't fix it, god knows why.

Doctor Casino, Sunday, 8 March 2020 13:47 (four years ago) link

Before the Internet, people like me and 5 others bought that Deconstruction record, listened to it twice, and sold it back.

Biden my time/Drinking her wine (PBKR), Sunday, 8 March 2020 16:13 (four years ago) link

anatol_merklich at 8:21 8 Mar 20

Spotify I use walking around on headphones or in the car, but the sound quality is a joke esp after I heard Tidal and (now) Qobuz

Not to be all save-a-Spotify, and I won't claim that this entirely equalizes the difference, but I wonder whether people who hold this opinion are aware that there is a setting in the Spotify app for adjusting the sound quality? If I remember correctly, it is not set to the highest setting by default (probably to save data use).

I'm very aware and also when you go through Chromecast via optical to a DAC it automatically goes to the highest quality

it's not even close to Qobuz 24 bit FLAC

that said it's fine for walking around, at work, car etc

just frustrating that Spotify won't offer a $20/mo. hi rez tier, because their catalog, search, discovery, basically everything else is so much better than any other service

Blues Guitar Solo Heatmap (Free Download) (upper mississippi sh@kedown), Sunday, 8 March 2020 16:31 (four years ago) link

Before the Internet, people like me and 5 others bought that Deconstruction record, listened to it twice, and sold it back.

heh I looked for this album on Spotify just the other day (unsuccessfully)

I had/have a challenging opinion that it has aged far better than the jane's LPs

umsworth (emsworth), Sunday, 8 March 2020 19:21 (four years ago) link

I bought that CD. The only thing i remember is that song about the temple at karnak

Οὖτις, Sunday, 8 March 2020 19:23 (four years ago) link

ums: fair enough!

anatol_merklich, Sunday, 8 March 2020 20:13 (four years ago) link

I don't own many LPs ( 50 possibly) but perversely I enjoy the limited choice, it means albums get played many times each and I really get to know them. that doesn't happen at all with spotify etc.

thomasintrouble, Monday, 9 March 2020 08:20 (four years ago) link

^ That's the main reason I still buy physical discs. (Mostly dirt cheap CDs though.) I seem to absorb them more fully in that form.

Also, that Vinyl doc upthread is a little bit fabulous. Thanks NJS.

Nag! Nag! Nag!, Monday, 9 March 2020 08:35 (four years ago) link

three weeks pass...

OK, I finally watched that Alan Zweig documentary upthread ("Vinyl"), and it inspired me to do some pruning on my collection.
My current threshold is to keep stuff only if I rate it a solid 3 stars or higher in my discogs list. We'll see how well I can stick to that.

(full disclosure, the lower rated records aren't actually gone yet, they're just moved down to the basement for now)

enochroot, Monday, 30 March 2020 11:35 (four years ago) link

aside from its vinyl content, that Zweig doc is a great museum of bygone Canadian hairstyles

turn the jawhatthefuckever on (One Eye Open), Monday, 30 March 2020 12:33 (four years ago) link

i have been meaning to come back to this thread to express my love for the zweig doc. it was just amazing.

budo jeru, Tuesday, 31 March 2020 03:36 (four years ago) link

I'm watching it now for the first time, what an amazing movie.

It's interesting to think about the timing of the movie too - in 2000, at the nadir for vinyl. It wasn't long before records started to be cool again.

skip, Thursday, 2 April 2020 22:49 (four years ago) link

I saw it in a theater in Portland!

love the "NOBODY else has this record" bit where like 5 different people hold it up

sleeve, Thursday, 2 April 2020 22:58 (four years ago) link

My 30 seconds of glory from Vinyl:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rCAGSnsnkVA

I think Alan is shooting a sequel right now. (Not right now, obviously.) I believe it's supposed to focus more on the records than the collecting.

clemenza, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:24 (four years ago) link

bygone Canadian hairstyles

Or for me, just bygone hair.

clemenza, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:26 (four years ago) link

that is a really amazing...everything. i love that clip. that is extremely relatable, too.

Karl Malone, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:36 (four years ago) link

phil that was YOU ????

budo jeru, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:38 (four years ago) link

who is the guy with the long hair ? was that your friend ?

budo jeru, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:41 (four years ago) link

That's me, late '90s, in my old apartment. The interview was actually about two hours, I think (some more got used in an alternate version, me talking about my crush on Susan Dey). I ran into Alan at a film a few months ago, and he said he was interested in an another interview for the sequel. But I've moved since then, now this, so I doubt it'll happen).

I'm not sure who that is before me. But let me be indulgent and post a clip of my friend Tim, wondering if owning 65 James Brown albums is unusual.

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VAleFzU9cb8

clemenza, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:43 (four years ago) link

Yes! I love that clip.

Karl Malone, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:50 (four years ago) link

that’s cool, clemenza. I’m kinda of scared to watch this documentary though, I’ve had to get rid of a lot of records in the past few years and lately it’s been making me sad. that Discogs thread too. *single tear*

brimstead, Thursday, 2 April 2020 23:53 (four years ago) link


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