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From:
To:
Date:
Thu, 28 Oct 1999 14:30:10 EDT
Subject:
(idm) Re: Classify
Msg-Id:
<0.465ee38a.2549f032@aol.com>
Mbox:
idm.9910.gz
Man, talk about a backlash from people with lots of records. It is like talking to drug addicts. They just won't listen to reason. Vinyl is that dangerous black crack everyone is hooked on to. Hey, I totally understand the appeal of vinyl and CD's. I've been collecting weird forms of music since I was about 9 or 10 years old. If you count all the records I've owned in my life it's probably in the high thousands. However, I don't believe in keeping records I don't listen to. Instead of having 5000 records, I stay around 1,000-1,500. When I want to get some new stuff, I can sell some old stuff I don't listen to. It offsets the cost. Yeah, I still blow most of my expendable income on music, but we all do that. After all, figure I have 1,000 records. Averaging 12"s and CD's, I guess there's around 45,000 minutes of music. That's about a month of non-stop playing. So if you have 6,000 records, it would take you about six months, 24-7, to listen to everything. It's not going to happen, people. I'm trying to think right now if I'm ever going to listen to that Kid 606 record I bought again. It was awful. Why keep it? I'm not suggesting this is a dogma people follow, and I'm as fanatical about records as the rest of you, but why keep it if you'll never listen to it again? What we really need to do is establish a National Electronic Music Library where we can archive everything and people can come in and listen to whatever they want. Maybe I can petition the government to fund it. Matt --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: idm-unsubscribe@hyperreal.org For additional commands, e-mail: idm-help@hyperreal.org