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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Who’s number one on your playlist?
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<blockquote data-quote="98 svt" data-source="post: 16769172" data-attributes="member: 183643"><p>That's a deep hole to fall in. I'd avoid it if you can<img src="data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7" class="smilie smilie--sprite smilie--sprite18" alt=":ROFLMAO:" title="ROFL :ROFLMAO:" loading="lazy" data-shortname=":ROFLMAO:" /></p><p>A "nice" record player starts around $1200 or so (Mine was $1700 and isn't considered a high tier record player by any means). Then the records are a whole other story. 70-80s metal can be expensive if you're looking for the real good pressings, most rock/metal records were used for rolling trays and coasters back in the day, so the Mint and Near Mint stuff is hard to come by. If you just go buy a new pressing, then you may as well just buy CDs or use MP3s. Most new records are just digital files, cut into a record. Not a single analog piece to most of them anymore. A trained ear can definitely hear it. The sound is just all squashed and compressed compared to a AAA pressing (Analog recording Analog mixing, and Analog mastering)</p><p>90s Metal is $$$$$. They are all pretty rare, as hardly any were pressed. In the 90s everyone was buying CDs.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="98 svt, post: 16769172, member: 183643"] That's a deep hole to fall in. I'd avoid it if you can:ROFLMAO: A "nice" record player starts around $1200 or so (Mine was $1700 and isn't considered a high tier record player by any means). Then the records are a whole other story. 70-80s metal can be expensive if you're looking for the real good pressings, most rock/metal records were used for rolling trays and coasters back in the day, so the Mint and Near Mint stuff is hard to come by. If you just go buy a new pressing, then you may as well just buy CDs or use MP3s. Most new records are just digital files, cut into a record. Not a single analog piece to most of them anymore. A trained ear can definitely hear it. The sound is just all squashed and compressed compared to a AAA pressing (Analog recording Analog mixing, and Analog mastering) 90s Metal is $$$$$. They are all pretty rare, as hardly any were pressed. In the 90s everyone was buying CDs. [/QUOTE]
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SVTPerformance's Chain of Restaurants
Road Side Pub
Who’s number one on your playlist?
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