Don't Miss Out! 10 Reasons to Buy CDs Now Before it's Too Late

Ойын-сауық

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Пікірлер: 1 900

  • @cheapaudioman
    @cheapaudioman Жыл бұрын

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  • @wallacem41atgmail

    @wallacem41atgmail

    Жыл бұрын

    For me, number six would include having the album art and liner notes at hand and not having to search for them on the internet where the information is often incomplete.

  • @boss123400

    @boss123400

    Жыл бұрын

    Still have about 200 CD's from the '90s ha! Still listen to them. I'm moving and putting together a new system. NR1711, MM7025 need a recommendation for speakers in 2.1 bookshelf's plus sub. Thanks

  • @paw45

    @paw45

    Жыл бұрын

    @ 07:26 Tom Petty went head-to-head with MCA again in 1981 when the label pushed to sell his next album, “Hard Promises,” for $9.98 a pop - a full dollar more than the norm at that time. On principle, Petty refused to release the record, stating that he wanted to keep costs down for his fans.

  • @raulzombiemachete

    @raulzombiemachete

    Жыл бұрын

    PS3 consoles are EXCELLENT media devices. Awesome for playing CDs

  • @aevans-jl9ym

    @aevans-jl9ym

    Жыл бұрын

    Just subscribed, Here in the UK, even the "thrift shops" no longer want donated CDs or DVDs they can't get rid of them. Over here most are now destined for landfill.

  • @shreddherring
    @shreddherring Жыл бұрын

    Number 11. You will actually Own your music, instead of just renting it. I still buy blurays instead of streaming too. Not only is the quality better, and far more consistent and reliable, but I dont have to worry about a particular thing suddenly not being available online anymore. Plus, deluxe edition cd's, and often cd single, will give you extra tracks that you wont find anywhere else. Just make sure if you're using EAC to rip to WAV, I honestly dont understand why anyone would seek out a cd because it is better quality, to then turn around and rip it to a compressed file type, defeats the object

  • @davidwald2938

    @davidwald2938

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm the same way for music because of blue ray 5.1 on my old reference level Pioneer but for movies, my cheapie 4k player became obsolete in just a few years because Samsung stopped updating them to play some newer movies. Nothing is more frustrating than buying a new movie that won't play so I'd rather stream new movies.

  • @mikafoxx2717

    @mikafoxx2717

    Жыл бұрын

    Lossless compression doesn't touch the original file in any way, it just finds more compact ways to store it. FLAC and ALAC are lossless and far away from the psychoacoustic Fourier based compression. Think of it like a ZIP file tailored for music.

  • @shreddherring

    @shreddherring

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mikafoxx2717 that is often the claim, but I can hear the difference between a flac and a wav, just like I can hear the difference between both and an mp3. Frankly, with the hard drives available today, I dont see the argument for shrinking these files for home listening, if it means I'm losing something. For people who are mainly portable listeners, it may be different

  • @mikafoxx2717

    @mikafoxx2717

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shreddherring I would request that you convert a WAV to FLAC and then back, and compare the bits of both. They're identical. It's the exact same bits going to your DAC.

  • @ElRobin

    @ElRobin

    Жыл бұрын

    @@shreddherring probably placebo effect. Make a blind A vs B test with about 20 tracks. I would be surprised if you guess correctly more than 50%

  • @totallyfrozen
    @totallyfrozen Жыл бұрын

    #3 Is absolutely true. In 25 years, I’ve never heard an mp3 or stream that sounds as good as a CD. 5:44 Beyond fun, I’ve decided that physical media is the only thing I really trust anymore. I can’t tell you how much money and how many singles and albums I’ve bought in iTunes only to have the music delete from my device. Then I return to the iTunes Store to restore the purchase and learn that the music is no longer for sale. So when iTunes stops selling it, they steal it back from everyone they had sold it to previously. No warning, no refund. The music is just GONE and unavailable. With CDs and cassettes I’ll always have my music.

  • @prototype9000

    @prototype9000

    Жыл бұрын

    higher bitrates will be indistinguishable from cd

  • @carmichaelmoritz8662

    @carmichaelmoritz8662

    Жыл бұрын

    If you play it through an equalizer there's basically hardly any difference.

  • @EricCampbellUAV

    @EricCampbellUAV

    Жыл бұрын

    it depends on how long ago they mixed and mastered the CD. i’m remastering some now

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    Жыл бұрын

    why you still need CD's ??? this guy is not understanding codecs, mad channel it is!

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    Жыл бұрын

    @PurpleTurtle hw ia not understanding codecs, computers. He needs a DVD players, mad here!

  • @msh6865
    @msh6865 Жыл бұрын

    Bought my first CD in 1987 and still buying them today. Yes, a better sounding medium to my ears.

  • @psrfpsrf

    @psrfpsrf

    Жыл бұрын

    me too, since about 1985, I don‘t no today the exact year, I bought CDs up to know to have my music for my own. But beside this, my mobil music is for several years now in my car on an USB Stick or phone in compressed AAC 320 and at home on a NAS in FLAC Audio via network. So I can hear my music on every floor and Player in my house. The CDs are stored in a separate cabinet.

  • @gypsypath1
    @gypsypath1 Жыл бұрын

    #3. YES! CDs just sound _richer_ and _deeper_ than streamed music.

  • @wojciech5177

    @wojciech5177

    Ай бұрын

    eventualy over time the quality will match, but you buy a cd for few dolallars and you have permanent right to that music! you don't rent it and pay for it every time you listen to it, or you listen for free and pay for that music with your time because of advertisment that only interupt your listening experience, that's the biggest factor for me to actualy buy cds it's that you own that music piece

  • @ThePittsburghToddy
    @ThePittsburghToddy Жыл бұрын

    I worked at Sam Goody for 10 years until ‘95. Until Best Buy and Circuit City came around, full price CDs were $18 and sale prices were typically $14.99. So, current CD pricing is an absolute steal!

  • @kevinhogaboom3551

    @kevinhogaboom3551

    Жыл бұрын

    Sam Goody, Strawberries and even Tower Records I feel were overpriced. Newbury Comics had new cds for $9.99 the first week of their release then most of the time they went to $11.99 for normal pricing. I used to love going into Newbury every Tuesday to see the new releases and employee picks

  • @redstang5150

    @redstang5150

    Жыл бұрын

    Agree, new release CDs back in the late 80s and 90s were expensive. 18 bucks for a single CD?! That's why I was a member of BMG through that time, as they had "buy one at full price, get 3 free" deals all the time. Occasionally it was buy one get 4 free. Of course the "one" was over priced and they charged for shipping and "handling" but on average it came out to about 7 or 8 bucks a piece. Granted, their selection left something to be desired, and their bullshit deal of if you didn't send in the mailing declining a shipment you got charged for the CD of the month, but overall it was still a good deal and really the only way to build your collection economically.

  • @rosswarren436

    @rosswarren436

    Жыл бұрын

    I know I paid $18 for my first CD. It was either Pink Floyd's Dark Side of the Moon or Fleetwood Mac's Rumors. They stayed $18 for a long time it seemed. (And this was back when $18 really was $18 if you get my drift). Was glad when they finally came down to $12 for most.

  • @ThePittsburghToddy

    @ThePittsburghToddy

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rosswarren436 Those were two of the first five CDs I purchased. The others were Revolver, CCRs Chronicle, and Eagles Greatest Hits. The Beatles CD was $20. Luckily, I had an employee discount of 30% so most CDs were around $12.40 for me.🖖🏼

  • @rosswarren436

    @rosswarren436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@ThePittsburghToddy man, that employee discount would have been freaking tempting. LOL. Good for you! Funny, I think CCR's Chronicle was in the first 10 CDs I bought too. Crazy times. Records were $5.99 so I still bought more vinyl, but the times they were a-changin'....

  • @mechanik1313
    @mechanik1313 Жыл бұрын

    Roughly a year before the pandemic, Best Buy physical stores were blowing out their CD stock at $3/$4/$5 each, brand new. I scored a ton of Sabbath and other stuff.

  • @eldermillennial2000

    @eldermillennial2000

    7 ай бұрын

    dang. so sad I missed this.

  • @j.t.cooper2963
    @j.t.cooper2963 Жыл бұрын

    I've bought about 300 CD's over the last couple of years and I've been buying them for 40 years now. I have 40 year old CD's that still sound as good as the day I bought them. You can't say that about any other medium. 💿

  • @JerrySpann-fn4kw

    @JerrySpann-fn4kw

    Күн бұрын

    BUt BrAinWasHeD IdiOts SaY VinYL iS BetTer BeCaUsE iT Is ExPENsIvE

  • @lizk555
    @lizk555 Жыл бұрын

    Love this! My 14 year old daughter recently bought a decent bookshelf stereo system with CD player, and she has been blown away by the quality. When she fully understood that the cool thing about CDs is that they are HERS, and no streaming service can decide whether or not to carry artists she likes, she was hooked. (I know this is obvious to older Millennials and up, but man. Once more Gen Z kids catch on, I bet CDs will start going up in price.)

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    Жыл бұрын

    You should give her a vinyl player !

  • @lizk555

    @lizk555

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucasrem I gave her my old one when I upgraded my turntable. She’s just at that point where vinyl’s a little pricey for what she wants.

  • @nikosidis

    @nikosidis

    Жыл бұрын

    Good point! Collecting and owning music will never go away. Good girl :)

  • @adiktadoalamusika

    @adiktadoalamusika

    Жыл бұрын

    I’m 13 and love collecting cds! I started with my parents cd wallet with a lot of used up scratched up cds that still work and then this april my mom took me to the store they got them from and I continued to buy them every once and while from there. And the CD player I use is my old play station 3

  • @waynemyatt8262

    @waynemyatt8262

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucasrem vinyl is too expensive compared to CDs and they takes away from the thrill of collecting. I can usually get an entire catalog from a band on cd for about the price of 2 vinyls.

  • @winnie2379
    @winnie2379 Жыл бұрын

    My adult son listened to a lot of CDs in his high school years and of course, when he moved out, his stuff didn’t. He had CD wallets with the discs to save space & to be able to transport all of the discs with him on overnight trips. I spent a couple of hours last wk reuniting discs with their liner notes & cases. He probably won’t want these back, but at least they’re organized now.

  • @NiteJerk

    @NiteJerk

    Жыл бұрын

    I'll take em

  • @eddieatoms5041

    @eddieatoms5041

    Жыл бұрын

    Damn. Winnie, you’re the real MVP

  • @SRMoore1178

    @SRMoore1178

    Жыл бұрын

    You rule! Now, are they in alphabetical order?

  • @winnie2379

    @winnie2379

    Жыл бұрын

    @@SRMoore1178 maybe one day….giving him last chance to claim them during holidays.

  • @swishasnkush1573

    @swishasnkush1573

    Жыл бұрын

    @@winnie2379 yes! Do not sell! Save for him even if he says sell them....save them quietly & hide them! Never sell!!!

  • @alessandroneri8929
    @alessandroneri8929 Жыл бұрын

    CD' rules. The BEST sound quality. Amazing Format. Long live beloved CD!!

  • @devilsoffspring5519

    @devilsoffspring5519

    Жыл бұрын

    I like them too, but they're a finicky format that can have problems with laser mistracking, giving a crackly fuzzy sound. I do agree that when the CD player is working properly, even lower-cost players are capable of extraordinarily good sound. I have a 30 year old Philips CD920 that I put a new laser in, and it sounds *great* now for the first time in three decades :) CDs are basically obsolete now because of the widespread availability of solid-state storage such as Micro SD cards, which have no moving parts and are generally trouble free. They're also very compact and cheap. CDs aren't really that compact by today's standards :) I still insist that legitimately-purchased music should be available in a lossless format, but you save it to a memory card and play it on a tablet PC (or other device) connected to your stereo, and you have outstanding sound without the finicky nature of CD players.

  • @joshdieckmann595
    @joshdieckmann595 Жыл бұрын

    I've been collecting CDs for a little over 30 years now, and will continue to do so. Same with vinyl, which I've collected for over 25. I like physical media: the experience of opening it up and looking at the packaging, putting the disc on the platter (or in the tray), reading liner notes and lyrics, and looking at the artwork. It helps solidify the experience, so it's not so ephemeral, like you might get with merely streaming. These days, I stream a lot of my music, but mostly because I buy the CD or vinyl copy, and then either use the download card or rip it to my own home media server, and then I can stream it on my PC at work to listen to there. When I'm at home, as much as possible, I like to actually use the media. Other good reason to own media is this: if you like music that is more niche, or like supporting local/regional artists, often times you can buy their CD at a show or online, and who knows if a year from now they'll still be around. I have a fair number of CDs I bought from bands during the MySpace era, and a scant few of those bands ever escaped the mid-late 2000's. Some of that music is not available in any kind of streaming platform, and not even been uploaded illegally to KZread. I used to go to a good number of smaller shows, and would try to buy demos and independent releases from bands when I would go, to help support them on the road. Most of that stuff is no longer available online in any format. But since I have the CD, I can still listen to it, or make my own backup copy on my media server.

  • @johnjeffery6638

    @johnjeffery6638

    Жыл бұрын

    Dude you wrote a book somewhere in there too😃

  • @hodumx

    @hodumx

    Жыл бұрын

    Hey boss, would you mind telling us what these hard to find artists and CDs is that you are referring to? Id appreciate it!

  • @joshdieckmann595

    @joshdieckmann595

    Жыл бұрын

    @@hodumx I bought a lot of demos and indie CDs during the MySpace era, for example. Or a lot of faith based heavy metal and hard rock stuff that goes out of print quickly. Or video game soundtracks that go out of print really fast.

  • @hodumx

    @hodumx

    Жыл бұрын

    @@joshdieckmann595 man, I’ll keep a lookout for that sort of thing in the discount and second hand stores, as well as the 7 oceans of course. Thank you!

  • @christopher9727

    @christopher9727

    Жыл бұрын

    2 Peter 3:9 The Lord is not slack concerning his promise, as some men count slackness; but is longsuffering to us-ward, not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance. Hebrews 11:6 6 But without faith it is impossible to please him: for he that cometh to God must believe that he is, and that he is a rewarder of them that diligently seek him. John 3:16-21 16 For God so loved the world, that he gave his only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in him should not perish, but have everlasting life. 17 For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved. 18 He that believeth on him is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. 19 And this is the condemnation, that light is come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their deeds were evil. 20 For every one that doeth evil hateth the light, neither cometh to the light, lest his deeds should be reproved. 21 But he that doeth truth cometh to the light, that his deeds may be made manifest, that they are wrought in God. Mark 1.15 15 And saying, The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: repent ye, and believe the gospel.

  • @The_Lunatic_Savant
    @The_Lunatic_Savant Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I’ll never understand loving a band and not wanting to own the physical copy. I think streaming has devalued music for most people.

  • @vanman757

    @vanman757

    Жыл бұрын

    Oh, most definetely mate... 🙂👍🏻

  • @stonecoldfloors8200

    @stonecoldfloors8200

    Жыл бұрын

    My wife and me have this conversation every weekend while listening to records drunk .. lol

  • @ArtHoward

    @ArtHoward

    Жыл бұрын

    Imagine seeing your favorite performer at the airport and saying, "Oh, I love your music! I've STREAMED every album!" I bet they would be really impressed with your dedication.

  • @TheKnobCalledTone.
    @TheKnobCalledTone. Жыл бұрын

    CD prices are already beginning to creep up. 5 years ago, I used to be able to good used CDs where I live for $1 each or less. Now they're more like $2-$3 each. Still a great value, but they're only going to get more expensive as more people realise how much bang-for-buck you get and millennials get hit with the same nostalgia bug for CDs that Gen X has for vinyl.

  • @jaklumen

    @jaklumen

    Жыл бұрын

    I am solidly Gen X and much like many of the other commenters here, I would rather deal with CDs all day long, than vinyl LPs and 45s. I found out from my parents' generation what a PITA vinyl record maintenance truly is. CD maintenance isn't a cakewalk either, but.. no, I'm not nostalgic for scratch sounds.

  • @redstang5150
    @redstang5150 Жыл бұрын

    I am a dinosaur that still buys CDs as my #1 option for acquiring new music. Purchasing used CDs on ebay for around 5 bucks a piece is a great way to grow your collection. As certain albums are sometimes hard to acquire on CD, now that FLAC files are available for purchase on a few sites (like bandcamp) I have become accustomed to buying those since there's not a sound quality sacrifice over getting the CD, and I always rip my CDs to FLAC anyway. Last option is to buy mp3s because I want my own copy regardless. I have no paid streaming plans - my library of almost 10,000 songs is effectively my own streaming service.

  • @alphaniner3770

    @alphaniner3770

    Жыл бұрын

    It certainly feels good to be a dinosaur! - Bandcamp - yeah!

  • @thomasalexand

    @thomasalexand

    Жыл бұрын

    Way to go.

  • @musestarlight1

    @musestarlight1

    Жыл бұрын

    That's a ton of money for something unnecessary 😂 $10 a month all the music in the world

  • @nikosidis

    @nikosidis

    Жыл бұрын

    I'm just like you bro. :D

  • @redstang5150

    @redstang5150

    Жыл бұрын

    @@musestarlight1 Hardly any of that goes to the artists, and at literally any moment they can lose/change their licensing agreement and you lose access to it. It's worth it to me. If I was starting from zero right now it would probably be harder to justify, but my collection was mostly built before these streaming services were even available. Not that expensive to keep adding now.

  • @jimgardner5129
    @jimgardner5129 Жыл бұрын

    Recently joined Discogs and I've been snapping up rarities from sellers all over the world. I'm amazed at the quality of product that was pressed 30 years ago, and more! Some folks have taken great care of their CDs over time. CD singles from the 80s and 90s rarely made their way to my little part of the world but now I can scoop the up. The only downside: you can pay more for the shipping than the disc.

  • @amnonhoppe

    @amnonhoppe

    Жыл бұрын

    Beware of discs manufactured after 1995, they are prone to the loudness war mastering... Look it up

  • @DavidslvPT
    @DavidslvPT Жыл бұрын

    Number 1 reason I keep buying CDs is because of their leaflet, love reading the extra information, sometimes they have amazing artwork. You can’t get that by streaming and vinyls normally do not come with one. I do them all nevertheless. There is also another level if you do have a Super Audio CD(SACD) and a SACD player.

  • @DavidEVogel

    @DavidEVogel

    Жыл бұрын

    Digital booklet?

  • @DavidslvPT

    @DavidslvPT

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DavidEVogel point me in the right direction

  • @DavidEVogel

    @DavidEVogel

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DavidslvPT When buying or streaming music albums at Apple Music it may include a digital booklet. The Angel Olson album "All Mirrors" is an example. The booklet is a PDF file.

  • @DavidslvPT

    @DavidslvPT

    Жыл бұрын

    @@DavidEVogel To be honest with you, I don't see the booklet on Apple Music, but I have noticed the booklet icon on Qobuz, thank you for pointing that out!

  • @cnhhnc
    @cnhhnc Жыл бұрын

    I grew up in the age of vinyl, but unlike many vinyl jockeys of my generation, I was deleriously happy when the CD appeared. Before that I was mainly a cassette man because I was NOT able to afford much in my youth during the age of vinyl. The CD was to many of us, a savior. No more pops, clicks, rumble, scratches-endless cleaning and fretting over the medium, and less dynamic range. You think vinyl is NOT compressed? Think again! I bought my first CDP in 1990. A mid-fi Sony that died in 1998. And began collecting CDs. Transitioning from the cassette. I had an AIWA cassette deck, a lower powered Pioneer integrated, and a set of Canadian DB Plus speakers in the late '80s as my first real system. To this I added the Sony CD deck. Later, when I had more money, I bought a set of JBL L80ts and a higher model Kenwood Dolby Receiver (130 watts x 2 @ 8 ohms). And I was off to the races! To this day, the CD remains my primary medium. I don't really do DACs. My two best players are a Harman Kardon HD 990-which can also function as a DAC-has an optical in. And a Jolida Music Van MKIV tube output/input CDP (four tubes, two transformers)-which really warms up that digital sound. Tubes and digital are a wonderful marriage. I prefer to own my music, I do stream, but when I stream I'm less concerned with lossless because it is either to experience some new music, or as background. A good CD can sound great if you have the right equipment. I don't care what the vinyl boys say. I also spin vinyl and my system is more mid-fi there but I don't hear anything fantastic when I'm playing LPs. They sound good enough, but NOT amazing. And, the noise is still usually around.And some records are not that dynamic in range. They don't match the expansiveness of the CD from soft to loud. A GOOD CD that is. The problem? There are a lot of poorly mastered and recorded CDs like there are lps and cassettes.

  • @gotchagoing8843

    @gotchagoing8843

    Жыл бұрын

    Well said...

  • @steven2809

    @steven2809

    Жыл бұрын

    👍

  • @thomasalexand

    @thomasalexand

    Жыл бұрын

    Yup. We had an event outside at my brother's field near Gatwick airport (England) two weekends ago. Around 40 people attended from 2pm to midnight. I used a pair of Q-acoustics BT3 speakers. One was active the other passive. I used my Sony digital audio player and played lossless (.wav) music using Bluetooth. I have over 800 lossless ripped CDs on my Sony player. There was no WiFi near the field but of course that wasn't a problem. I've also archived all the ripped CDs on a portable drive. Own your own music and be in control.

  • @fulltimecasualnz

    @fulltimecasualnz

    Жыл бұрын

    Vinyl and CD hit different. One is not better in my opinion- they are just different and both great to experience. A lot of the sound is amp and speaker setup anyway.

  • @robertjermantowicz8619

    @robertjermantowicz8619

    Жыл бұрын

    Smart fellow!

  • @icenic_wolf
    @icenic_wolf Жыл бұрын

    Remember in the early 2000s when Microsoft accidentally deleted everybody's Zune libraries? That was reinforcement enough for me to decide to never ever sell my CD collection. Which sound better than any streaming service anyway.

  • @labnine3362
    @labnine3362 Жыл бұрын

    I have been buying CDs since 1986 and have thousands of them. They are still my favorite format despite the fact that I do love vinyl too. Physical media rocks! My favorite CD player so far is the Marantz ND8006 (solid and useful AF and sounds AMAZING) and the second favorite is an Onkyo C-7030. Newbies: before 10 years ago, it was pretty common to find used vinyl for $3. The markup in the last few years is legitimately insane.

  • @eddieatoms5041
    @eddieatoms5041 Жыл бұрын

    I really appreciate this. I Love music & I love physically holding an album in my hand. It’s just special to me. I still buy cds, cassettes, & vinyl…& I’ll never stop. Of course I like all 3 but cassettes & cds are my favorite. Everything you said is so on point & pretty much my exact thoughts & feelings on the subject. Great video.

  • @bobbydmonkey
    @bobbydmonkey Жыл бұрын

    I remember I used to have CD players that would let you “program” your own track list. I used to like to rearrange the order of the tracks on the cd so that they flowed better than the original track order.

  • @Harald_Reindl

    @Harald_Reindl

    Жыл бұрын

    But the usability was a pain in the ass compared with a proper software combination like mpd + cantata

  • @canonlon311
    @canonlon311 Жыл бұрын

    One piece of advice I have to say, do a bit of research and find the best sounding CD for a particular title > not all CD’s are created/mastered equally

  • @donaldspaulding6973
    @donaldspaulding6973 Жыл бұрын

    So much good advice here! Exact audio copy is by far the best program out there. The CD has an Achilles heel with the optical part being prone to damage and errors. But EAC fixes that! If nothing else, the CD is a license to listen in your home. Same goes for DVD and your favorite movies. You don't have to pay an online service to watch it, which is going to be the new norm with the masses of the newer generations.

  • @EgoChip

    @EgoChip

    8 ай бұрын

    Not only do you not need to pay to stream it if you own it on CD/DVD, they are also not tracking your listening or viewing habits and using that data for marketing and selling it on.

  • @chrislj2890
    @chrislj2890 Жыл бұрын

    I have over 900 CDs, and many were purchased through the the record clubs back in the '90s, such as BMG, Columbia House, and Musical Heritage Society. I haven't bought any physical music media probably for 20 years, but last night I did order a double vinyl album of Frank Sinatra from Walmart. I'm just getting back into it, and at one time I was going to get rid of my CDs but luckily didn't. I did that back when I got more into CDs and gave away a bunch of vinyl that I wish I still had.

  • @dieseltruck3695

    @dieseltruck3695

    Жыл бұрын

    Impressive collection. Keep em! It may go up in value someday.

  • @ettoredivirgilius8789
    @ettoredivirgilius8789 Жыл бұрын

    Back in the day, I had all the club membership, RCA -->BMG, Columbia House, and paid an average of 3 bucks per CD. Bought on sale in bulk. Worked for me. I have 1200 CDs

  • @michaelkeefer4293
    @michaelkeefer4293 Жыл бұрын

    I have an old Pioneer CD player from the late 80s that still works perfectly and sounds really good. Another good point about buying CDs is to help support the artists that you enjoy that are currently making music.

  • @michaelkeefer4293

    @michaelkeefer4293

    Жыл бұрын

    @Lauren Glenn I do.

  • @funkunko

    @funkunko

    Жыл бұрын

    @Lauren Glenn yes..? but what’s so bad about a CD instead of a vinyl? much cheaper anyways

  • @AndrewEbling

    @AndrewEbling

    Жыл бұрын

    Maybe if you buy the CD from a buskers on the street, otherwise most of it goes in the record companies pocket.

  • @Billjpb19
    @Billjpb19 Жыл бұрын

    Your video absolutely got me thinking about CDs again. I pulled out my CD binder from the 90s and 2000s. I'm stoked! I was at Goodwill and found brand new CDs from unknown artists that I have never heard of, still in the shrink wrap. I bought Switch Foot, Black Crows, and Verseria (A local Indianapolis Band) for $2 each. I am back on board for CDs! Thank you so much for this video!

  • @drewtheunspoken3988

    @drewtheunspoken3988

    Жыл бұрын

    I like Switch Foot and Black Crows. I've never heard of Verseria.

  • @davidbowie2046
    @davidbowie2046 Жыл бұрын

    I remember buying my first CD in 87, having listened to vinyl since the 60's. Was blown away! Plus you could access tracks instantly. Physical media still has a place in my life. I do stream a lot these days as I just don't have the room for records and CD's, but if i like an artist I always buy it physically to support them.

  • @dkeener13
    @dkeener13 Жыл бұрын

    #11 - it supports the artist, a lot more than the fractions of a penny they get when you stream their music, especially if you buy new. #12 - it supports the efforts to remaster, reissue, and to otherwise bring old recordings new life. you get audiophile reissues without paying $100+ per LP, and without needing a $1000+ vinyl rig to hear the difference.

  • @twisted2291

    @twisted2291

    Жыл бұрын

    New CD sales. The artist still makes pennies on them. Artists always make their money touring. The record companies make a good 85% of the money made on media sales. The Reissuing and Remastering of the media falls to the artist. They are the ones that make the decision to this 90% of the time. Most of them wait until they can buy the rights back from the record company. Then they remaster there stuff to make it the way they wanted it to sound. If it was up to the record companies. They would beat a dead horse.

  • @dkeener13

    @dkeener13

    Жыл бұрын

    on a big label they only make $.50 or so per disc. if they publish themselves, as many now do, then the artists gets everything but overhead. it's not much but it's a lot more than they get from Spotify.

  • @dougfa3515

    @dougfa3515

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, that means more to me now than it used to when I was younger.

  • @totallyfrozen

    @totallyfrozen

    Жыл бұрын

    @@dkeener13 50 cents a disc would be an insanely great contract! Most artists make literally fractions of a penny per disc.

  • @gq1foru
    @gq1foru Жыл бұрын

    Randy, thank you for this!!! I ripped my entire cd collection 5 years ago. My friends make fun of me because they feel the music they stream is just as good. Glad to know I was right all along and wasn't wasting my time ripping cd's! One of my friends had a whiskey tasting party at his home and his internet kept cutting out, so we used the ripped music on my phone....yet another advantage!

  • @EricB256
    @EricB256 Жыл бұрын

    #3: Yes, very much so. It's kind of sad that many self-releasing artists have given up on releasing their albums on CD over the past 5 years at least. At the moment, I've got quite the wishlist of music that is not available in lossless sound. 10 years ago, I used to write to artists and /or indie labels directly, if an album that I want has not been released in anything other than mp3 or vinyl (read: not on CD) to ask them if I can buy a lossless copy from tthem directly, with the goal to burn my own jewel case CD version of it for my home stereo. And every time I got a reply to that, it was a positive one and we had a deal. Due to being busy with work, I rarely get to do that now, hence the workload. For example, I managed to write to an artist with that intention only once this year. And the album in question that came out in 2015 is really beautiful. Also, in the used CD store in town (in Germany), I've never seen as many great rare albums on CD for very affordable prices than I have done this year. The advantage of CD over streams is that you don't need to have a safety copy because it is supposed to "last a lifetime of listening enjoyment", as it said on the original packaging in the 80s, and that streams can disappear without prior notice for seemingly no reason whatsoever. Downloads do not have a booklet with information on who plays what on the album, whereas CDs mostly do. The names of the musicians playing the good stuff usually have been the kind of information to look for that's very useful for my new music discovery process. Whereas the self-learning algorithms of streaming sites recommend you stuff based on your prior input, and will thus not broaden your mind musically, following favorite musicians and producers playing on other people's CDs will, because often, these musicians will branch out into musical styles that you are not familiar with yet. Also, there is so many great music out there to enjoy!

  • @myfriendgoo2816
    @myfriendgoo2816 Жыл бұрын

    I have a nearby thrift store that charges only 25 cents for used CDs. Needless to say, any good ones they get go fast. Another one is at 99 cents (80 cents on senior day for those who qualify) and gets a better caliber of discs and they stay around a bit longer. To me the great thing about the cheap prices is being able to expand musical horizons into jazz, world music, reggae and anything else that might seem interesting.

  • @filofilo8127
    @filofilo8127 Жыл бұрын

    I still collect CD's when I can't find the vinyl version. CD's used is also a good way to build your music collection on the cheap. The physical media is tactile and gives you a sense of ownership. Digital is good but disposable.

  • @krwd

    @krwd

    Жыл бұрын

    Ditto

  • @subliminalvibes
    @subliminalvibes Жыл бұрын

    I'm 46 and still have many of my original CDs. I need to find GENUINE old CD shops though. I bought some CDs last year which turned out to be 'remastered' loudness wars remixes so I'm looking for old and USED. 👍😎

  • @1998mchp

    @1998mchp

    Жыл бұрын

    Raiders of the Lost Digital Ark. Everything after 1995 is dynamically destroyed including nearly every 'remaster' - all brickwalled horrorshows. Any digital native has never heard a non brickwalled Graceland via streaming.

  • @brorjordas1979
    @brorjordas1979 Жыл бұрын

    I love CD's as much as vinyl. Been a collector of my favorite bands' hard copies ever since mid '90s. I do love to own material in my shelves. Not bought that much music lately - but whenever a new must-have comes by, I surely buy it as a hard copy. New albums do come quite cheap - it's the old hard-to-find collectables that cost. Even live bootlegs can cost quite a bit - whenever find what you still do nlt own.

  • @Aramanth
    @Aramanth Жыл бұрын

    Great video! Thanks for keeping the faith!! 💿 I worked in music retail for years... I went thru vinyl, cassettes, the short-lived DAT, the CD, the short-lived MiniCD, and finally... Digital killed it.

  • @markmcqueen1882
    @markmcqueen1882 Жыл бұрын

    I grew up with vinyl. When CDs hit the market, I ditched vinyl and never looked back. Good quality (recorded and mastered) CDs are just as good as good quality vinyl, IMO, and you don't have to suffer through the drawbacks of vinyl records (careful handling, cleaning, and most of all wear and tear). It's a PITA that I don't miss and I'm not inclined to return to. I also agree CDs sound better than streaming. More CDs is a good thing. :)

  • @Gman1044

    @Gman1044

    Жыл бұрын

    Just like I don't miss chemical based photography.

  • @risingempireentertainment

    @risingempireentertainment

    Жыл бұрын

    records kill cds. Cant defeat real audio

  • @Hirnlego999

    @Hirnlego999

    Жыл бұрын

    Still better to have on harddrives You can often quite easily find better sounding masters in digital format so you can actually even store several variants without the hassle of changing discs

  • @ENGLISHISBEST

    @ENGLISHISBEST

    Жыл бұрын

    Come on you lot getting eggy over different formats, they all have a place in music & suit all today. I have vinyl, tapes, cd's ,hundreds of hi res flac albums on hard drives & usb & I stream. It's about versatility and access to whatever we need now unlike years ago when we could maybe go to town buy the album or single normally one or 2 at a time & treasure the sleeve, reading it back to front & playing it a few times a day until next pay day. Sometimes ordering from abroad waiting for 2 weeks before it arrived. It's nice it's convenient today but not the same excitement. Today its mc donalds fast food style.

  • @ENGLISHISBEST

    @ENGLISHISBEST

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Hirnlego999 No its not. Hard drive is cold convenient music. Like turning on tapped beer when there are special bottled versions to savour. I take it you have never experienced proper music ownership or got a decent vinyl collection started about 50 years ago to treasure to re- visit & bring back memories of those days you bought it. I can picture in my mind where I purchased every album & memories of friends/girlfriends, family, places, age & fashion. Hard drive phewey. Only good for back ups really or in car.

  • @burliesanford1863
    @burliesanford1863 Жыл бұрын

    Hey Randy , about 1984 or 85 I bought a 100 watt Curtis Mathis rack system and it had dual cassette, turn table with equalizer. I had to buy a separate CD player to make a pretty decent two channel system . I bought my first CD at the local Wally World for right at 26 bucks , Boston their first album More Than A Feeling and their was no comparison in my opinion when I cranked Boston up . CD's were a great delight to my ears , the main drawback being at the time they were about 10 bucks higher per album over vinyl. I thought it couldn't any better when it came to crystal clear music. The CD's were high priced at the time and worth it , no flipping the vinyl and best of all everything on one side with no stylus sound just loud clear music. The good old days , I'm 65 years of age now and I still like my tunes played loud . CD's did the trick and still do .

  • @michaelmohrle1773
    @michaelmohrle17739 ай бұрын

    I am getting back into them because they are approaching the same nostalgia my albums did. Plus I found my first CD player, a Magnovox boombox with built-in CD player (big deal in mid to late 80s). I want to get a bunch of my cassettes too because the tape player sounds great too, it has a 5 band equalizer and both speakers have a volume control !!

  • @ImminghamIronhead
    @ImminghamIronhead Жыл бұрын

    I started my first CD collection three years ago with a DVD player; I pay £2 max inc postage for a CD, £3 max for a double LP. I was vinyl for years and then went to mp3 for the sheer portability. It's quite something to listen to LP's in their entirety after all this time.

  • @doplinger1
    @doplinger1 Жыл бұрын

    I recently dug mine out from storage (I had about 500 discs) and I’m reripping them at a high bitrate, then putting them on display again. I was nearly at a point a year or two ago where I was going to sell them all!

  • @mgonzales56
    @mgonzales56 Жыл бұрын

    I'm right there with you brother. I love my CD's. I have every CD I have bought since 1984. I bought a new CD player around three years ago, and it sounds great through my old Pioneer SX950 that I bought new in 1978. I will always prefer the sound of a CD to streaming. Thanks for the video. Really enjoyed it.

  • @haqitman
    @haqitman Жыл бұрын

    I like CDs because they sound great, they are maximum resolution after all. I don't have to deal with ads, or being profiled or algorighmed, or paying a monthly fee that if I stop playing I lose access to my music. I'll take a CD over vinyl any day. I actually own a physical copy of the music I love forever. I can even pass them down to our kids. And now we can all get them at what should have been the price all along, $5-$10. The only downside really is that the cases are fragile and the artwork is much smaller format, handled by ripping them losslessly to digital media (they are digital to start with after all) and keeping the physical media as the archive copy. Long live CDs!

  • @VivianLund
    @VivianLund Жыл бұрын

    So funny, my husband and I got out our old CD collection that dates to about 1986 and beyond last week. We had forgotten just how good CD’s sound - much better than streaming- I completely agree, we’re going to start buying CD’s again!

  • @paulhardison863
    @paulhardison863 Жыл бұрын

    Yes cd's sound way better

  • @paulmilligan3007
    @paulmilligan3007 Жыл бұрын

    This just popped up in my feed; Thank You for reminding me to keep collecting and playing my CD's and the reminder about Exact Audio Copy.

  • @Fiddlesticks62
    @Fiddlesticks62 Жыл бұрын

    Great advice. I own 10's of thousands of CD's and have de-gutted the jewel cases and put them in storage. The paperwork & discs are in hundreds of notebooks holding 200+ pieces. I've also digitized my collection of Reels & cassettes. Those consist of decades of air checks. Never a loss of anything to listen to. All the big bulky equipment along with Monster Cable and Lasserdiscs & vinyl are also in storage. Everything is played thru a Bose Wave Radio, and for the most part, is accurate playback. Really a happy camper. Enjoy listening.

  • @fulltimecasualnz
    @fulltimecasualnz Жыл бұрын

    I adore CDs! At home I prefer records but in my photographic studio I'm spinning CD's. I'm now doubling up on titles and already the prices are high. I do love how new releases on CD's are in cardboard sleeves. Makes it feel a lot more analogue. Better for the planet too. I'm currently spinning Adore by Pumpkins on CD and its utterly brilliant. The 2011 remaster of Pink Floyd the Wall on CD is also breathtaking.

  • @upupandaway5646

    @upupandaway5646

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree get them while you can

  • @groofoot

    @groofoot

    Жыл бұрын

    I also have multiple copies of my favorite CDs! I always keep a couple copies of my favorite titles IN the shrink wrap! ** Unrelated note, regarding Floyd, have you seen that Roger Waters is re-recording DSOTMoon all by himself? .... Something tells me it's going to be a let down .... the man's almost 80, for heaven's sake .....

  • @vrakula

    @vrakula

    Жыл бұрын

    I hate the cd cardboard sleeves. Very easy to make fine scratches to the disc when sliding it in and put..

  • @Blahmanwhysoserious
    @Blahmanwhysoserious Жыл бұрын

    My main reason for buying cds for me is to avoid a situation where an artist only offers a remaster digital, I still have my old Megadeth cds before all the remaster/tinkering and literally no other way to hear the originals without my cds. It’s like having the original star wars on vhs where Han Solo shot first

  • @pauln6803

    @pauln6803

    Жыл бұрын

    The remixed Megadeth CDs are awful! They've had so much polish applied that they sound more like pop music.

  • @thomasalexand

    @thomasalexand

    Жыл бұрын

    Not a complete fan of remastered CDs. The remaster of Bowie's Ziggy Stardust is awful.

  • @Blahmanwhysoserious

    @Blahmanwhysoserious

    Жыл бұрын

    @@pauln6803 yeah I recently re ripped all my cds to lossless, and was thankful I hung onto all my collection I amassed during the 90s and 2000s. There is always a headache with some of the purchased digital tracks as well, freaking iTunes has errored out on me thinking some tracks aren't available in my region. With my cds/files I dont have to deal with any of that bs.

  • @pauln6803

    @pauln6803

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Blahmanwhysoserious Let's be honest, remasters are usually a way to milk more money from fans. The Metallica remasters are barely distinguishable to the originals and I've already expressed my disdain for what Dave and his ego did to Peace Sells, So Far, and Rust In Peace. But... I have to say the Relapse records remasters of the Death albums are excellent as they were remixed to give the instruments a bit more separation without losing any of the aggression. Plus there's extra liner notes and the addition of lots of demos and live performances. I too spent weeks of ripping hundreds of CDs, and polishing the now hard/impossible to come by ones I'd mistreated in my teenage years! Don't do iTunes, won't do streaming and if I can help it (price/availability) I prefer not to give Amazon any money because they're too big and I don't like the way they treat the employees. My money tends to go through Bandcamp these days as I can purchase a recording, the artist (or at least the label if it's not self published) gets a decent share and there's no DRM or proprietary formats to stop me copying the files to any storage or using playback device I so choose. If it wasn't for the difficulty and expense of obtaining non mainstream CDs here in post brexit Britain (I used to import a lot from the EU, Switzerland and before the shipping got ridiculous, the US) I'd probably still be buying CDs.

  • @iangeorge7913
    @iangeorge7913 Жыл бұрын

    Would love to see more about CD players you like or your stereo setup with a CD Player. I basically put together my entire turntable setup based on your various reviews and would love to add a CD Player as well.

  • @koreyb
    @koreyb Жыл бұрын

    While I don't play my CDs, I do have CDs of all my very most favorite bands, so that I can easily just rip them into mp3s if my online mp3s ever get corrupted. I play my mp3s from my old Samsung phone by bluetooth and let it shuffle all my songs so I am often surprised by which song comes next. I like that sort of random playback that you just can't get from a CD of just one band at a time. It is like having my own radio station that only plays my favorite songs and never has any commercial breaks.

  • @MrWinger1951
    @MrWinger1951 Жыл бұрын

    With a collection of over 2000 CDs, bought over the last 35 years, I agree with your assessments, especially #3. Yes, I spend more listening time with streaming, but that is for convenience and discovery. And I don't buy CDs much anymore, but I do with special albums and artists. The CD format will be around for a very long time yet to come.

  • @gotchagoing8843

    @gotchagoing8843

    Жыл бұрын

    My collection of cd's tops out at a bit over 600. I have no vinyl, and don't want it either.

  • @tentonhammer5469

    @tentonhammer5469

    Жыл бұрын

    I've also been collecting cds hard Rock and metal for over 25 yrs slowed down alot a few yrs back now only get 1 or 2 a month if that. Have over 3000 albums. When people see my collection for the first time they say haven't you heard of Spotify.

  • @darthdurkelthewise320
    @darthdurkelthewise320 Жыл бұрын

    IMO, if you choose any single way to enjoy your music, you’re backing yourself into a corner and there is significant compromise one way or the other (price, availability, sq). I find it better to pull and enjoy from some streaming, some vinyl, and yes for me mostly CD. Lastly, considering the recent MOFI analog controversy you’re wasting a lot of time hand-wringing over the format when you can just enjoy your music. CDs will not be dying any time soon. Good video as always!

  • @geraldmartin7703

    @geraldmartin7703

    Жыл бұрын

    The MoFi online hand wringing and hair pulling is fascinating. Especially for an audio agnostic like me:

  • @davidshepherd265

    @davidshepherd265

    Жыл бұрын

    @@geraldmartin7703 I have one MoFi album, bought it because it was half price from memory, and a good deal. It does sound very good, to me anyway, but my ears are shot, and while I appreciate and enjoy high quality music, I don't need the best of the best of the best. I wouldn't pay stupid prices for their stuff, but for the right price I'd definitely buy more.

  • @m.hreels9822
    @m.hreels9822 Жыл бұрын

    This is a fantastic video!❤📀🔊 I just subscribed. I haven’t played a CD in so long ever since streaming came out.

  • @billpetersenjr.5781
    @billpetersenjr.5781 Жыл бұрын

    My parents had a record store in the late 70s to mid-80s which meant collecting music was in my blood so to speak. So I never stopped buying music, in the same way, I never stopped buying books. Not even when streaming/digital formats became prevalent. I did go through the phase everyone went through and stopped buying vinyl for several years. In fact, quite a few of the artists I listened to in college released a lot of their catalog on CD only at the time. I'm in the process now of replacing lost CDs that mysteriously disappeared even though I have quality digital copies of them. And my primary reasons are sound quality, enjoying the physical copy in my hand, and collecting or completing a particular artist's catalog. I still stream but really for background listening purposes and to preview particular albums to determine if I really want to buy them (either in vinyl or CD). And for some artists, I may purchase lossless downloads because I want to support the artist but am not really committed to buying the physical copy. The funny part about some vinyl purists is tying themselves in knots justifying paying $20+ for repressed vinyl of artists' recordings that were never pressed on vinyl to begin with. Buying new vinyl pressings of new releases also isn't a guarantee that the vinyl will sound better than the CD format. A case in point is the latest Calexico release. The vinyl copy I have sounds muddy on some tracks and no amount of cleaning will fix it and I have a nice phono set up so I know it's not that. The digital download sounds much cleaner and I can hear nuances lost in that vinyl pressing I have. But I get the nostalgia factor of buying vinyl for new recordings because vinyl can add warmth to a recording and because you want all the extras that come with a nicely packaged special pressing. I do this for CDs as well. In the end, though it's all about enjoying music. I mean that's really why I endeavor to upgrade my hi-fi system is to make listening to music that much more enjoyable and give new life to my music collection.

  • @jasondevers
    @jasondevers Жыл бұрын

    99 cents to 1.50 at my local thrift stores and love the hunt. You can also use Plex to host your exact audio copy rips as your own streaming service.

  • @rosswarren436
    @rosswarren436 Жыл бұрын

    CDs are 40 years old this year. Pretty amazing. They have lasted longer than any other physical medium other than vinyl. As the advertising on some demo CDs said in 1982, "Hear the light..."

  • @geraldmartin7703

    @geraldmartin7703

    Жыл бұрын

    I own thousands of the things, collected since the dawn of the CD era. My only frustration is the technology is four decades old and the disc playing time still 78-80 minutes. Why not audio only DVDs with multiple hours playing times with same sound quality?

  • @rosswarren436

    @rosswarren436

    Жыл бұрын

    @@geraldmartin7703 would have required a new schema (how the full-bandwidth audio tracks are laid down and the information of how to play them) for DVD or later Blu-ray for audio only. I guess no one was willing to take the chance on it. Any manufacturer would have had to get "buy in" from some of the record labels, and labels generally hate having too many formats to deal with (and advertising costs). So, such cool ideas died on the vine. But yeah, imagine a whole "box set" on ONE disc, with even static covers, lyrics, and band photos that would be displayed on a TV while the music played. I think after the death (non-adoption) of the better sounding DSD based SACD both the labels and manufacturers were happy to just stick to CD and vinyl, something consumers "understood" and wouldn't need education about. I remember all the confusion (and misinformation) regarding SACDs. Many wrongly thought they were "20-bit CDs" and didn't have a clue what DSD was all about.

  • @charlienyc1

    @charlienyc1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@geraldmartin7703 There were attempts in the early 2000s yielding the DVD-A and SACD formats which were in competition with each other for the next new format. I liked the sound of SACD so didn't pay much attention to DVD-A. Evidently most people didn't pay attention to either due to the rise of the MP3, which was a much more convenient format. Besides, I always thought albums made when LPs were the prevailing format were better: 44 minutes of carefully curated music > 79 minutes of the same plus whatever else fit on the disc. By the time you hit track 14 it started to get tedious. To hear hours of music by one artist, just listen to more than one album.

  • @davidwald2938

    @davidwald2938

    Жыл бұрын

    @@charlienyc1 lol, all I do these days is overpay for old SACDs and DVD Audio's. Rarely buy CD's cause I can just stream but not in surround. I'd be embarrassed to say what I paid for Aerosmith's Toys in the Attic but when I got it...it was worth every penny. So glad I finally discovered hi res surround. Better late than never

  • @charlienyc1

    @charlienyc1

    Жыл бұрын

    @@davidwald2938 Yup, I started buying them again once I realized they could be ripped. Then I bought some music on NativeDSD because evidently I hadn't spent enough yet!

  • @fabriziovigni4076
    @fabriziovigni4076 Жыл бұрын

    Great videos! I still buy cds, especially second hand ones. My collection keeps getting bigger and bigger and my speakers say thank you.

  • @CarvelLoafer
    @CarvelLoafer Жыл бұрын

    All good points, thanks for the info. I collect both vinyl and CDs, prefer vinyl just because I grew up with it. I record the vinyl or rip the CD into a .wav file, split into the individual songs, tag the files consistently with the album art, year, genre, etc. and export two versions, .mp3 for my phone and .wav for the main house stereo. I file each album in its own folder so they are easy to manage. And having an android phone I can put a HUGE SD card to hold my entire library (I suppose you could buy a top of the line Apple phone too). The real vinyl stays in the house to play, and we play it a lot, and the CDs go out to my shop and I play them out there.

  • @trickfall8752
    @trickfall8752 Жыл бұрын

    The number one reason for me to have CD's around is there are some things that just aren't available on streaming services. Mostly it's random b sides from a single CD, or super indie releases, but there are also records that for some reason are just not available to stream. For example I really love the debut album by this band The Real People and even though it was released on Sony I've never been able to find it streaming anywhere. I do have my CD copy though.

  • @mrmuffer69

    @mrmuffer69

    Жыл бұрын

    I agree 100% I have lots of stuff promos singles and more that are not available to stream.

  • @JoseMorales-lw5nt

    @JoseMorales-lw5nt

    Жыл бұрын

    RIGHT ON, AUDIOPHILES! I just laugh at the fact that I pay a monthly subscription to KZread MUSIC. And yet, I can't download any Jimi Hendrix albums! Meanwhile, my CD collection has a great set of BEST OF collections. Yup, THE JIMI HENDRIX EXPERIENCE happens to be one of those 💿!

  • @Harald_Reindl

    @Harald_Reindl

    Жыл бұрын

    I have FLAC files you couldn't buy at physical media at all in my 100k tracks library

  • @Harald_Reindl

    @Harald_Reindl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@mrmuffer69 you guys think there is only the decision between physical media and streaming? I ditched physical media long before I had a Internet connection

  • @davenhla
    @davenhla Жыл бұрын

    About CD sound quality- A lot, and I mean A LOT of music that came out in the hay day of CD, mostly the early to mid 90's, was not re-recorded for digital streaming. A lot of it was "ripped" into a computer system and then converted using software many years back. This can work ok, or it can work pretty lousy depending on the age of the conversion and software used. Obviously old conversions used old software and it left a mark. Sometimes the bass sounds like it is playing out of a speaker with a towel over the woofer, or sounds like the speaker was underwater, or playing through a pane of glass. For a listener that never heard the music when it was "new" back then or heard it from physical media, they might not notice. Sometimes the drum beats become blurred, or "sharp but muted" if that makes sense.... sound levels can be out of whack..... it is pretty noticeable on certain music side by side. Plus, physical media is a thing. And by that I mean, EVERYTHING is going to "as a service" which means they want you to pay them money every month and then STILL buy titles. Except when you stop paying every month your stuff is locked. They are doing this with video games, even options like heated seats in cars! DON'T LET THEM LOCK YOUR MUSIC COLLECTION BEHIND A MONTHLY PAYMENT. Get physical media. Get NON BLUE TOOTH players for your media. Why non blue tooth? Amazon Sidewalk. Look it up if you don't know what it is. I recommend thrift stores for CD players. Local GoodWill has given me a dozen "old" CD players for less then $5 per. 2 of them didn;t work right. One of them was missing a power cord. All of them cost at least $150 when new, the most expensive one I found was a JVC 200 disc jukebox style that worked perfectly($499 new). 1990's big name brand CD players, well, a few had crappy DAC(Sony was hit and miss) but a lot of them had top notch and if they still work, they work. I have enough to last the rest of my life and it cost me like $60. Much harder to find old players for Vinyl at the thrift.

  • @hdmoviesource
    @hdmoviesource Жыл бұрын

    Great video, time to start working on that CD Collection again, lol.

  • @jamesland
    @jamesland Жыл бұрын

    Haha, great vid! Special mention to #5 👏 I too recently did a comparison (by accident actually) of high quality songs in my iTunes ripped from CD compared to high-quality setting on Spotify. CD version killed it.. Streaming sounded really good if not comparing but overall, CD is king of sound.

  • @Matt-fl6ys
    @Matt-fl6ys Жыл бұрын

    With vinyl making it's comeback, the CD market is really good. Sometimes cheaper than buying a digital copy, been buying them on mass to build up my music library. Exact copy in it's report also tells you how much the song is peaked, telling you if the song is a victim of the volume wars.

  • @CharlesMuccia
    @CharlesMuccia Жыл бұрын

    Spot on video! My collection of music consists of vinyl, CDs and streaming. Been collecting vinyl since I was a teenager and CDs since the early 80s. My favorite format is CDs and I have a collection of over 4000, snd I still buy CDs. After years of messing around with different components I finally have a setup I love and makes my CDs sound amazing. My system makes CDs sound warm, full and open and it's now my preferred way to listen to music. Thanks for another great video!

  • @cedfan1
    @cedfan1 Жыл бұрын

    Great video ! I usually find used CDs in mint to near mint condition for 1 to 3 dollars all the time. Thrift stores and independent record shops are great places to find them.

  • @abvmoose87
    @abvmoose8711 ай бұрын

    Ahh cool video good topic really, i was just thinking about this tve otver day. Its starting to get really hard to find audio cds even on big sites, will come back for this one later

  • @tomflanagan3889
    @tomflanagan3889 Жыл бұрын

    Lots of great points. I also think buying high quality downloads (like FLAC) and burning to a CD is also a good option for those CDs that have gone out of print and are ungodly expensive. Always important to have back ups. Sometimes albums just get removed from streaming services.

  • @labnine3362

    @labnine3362

    Жыл бұрын

    Qobuz is a great service for buying FLAC. I have purchased hundreds of albums from them and you get the hi-res for a low cost. As a nice service, they let you stream the albums you buy for free too. No subscription required.

  • @tomflanagan3889

    @tomflanagan3889

    Жыл бұрын

    @@labnine3362 I recently discovered Quboz download store. Love it!

  • @labnine3362

    @labnine3362

    Жыл бұрын

    @@tomflanagan3889 Early on, I used Tidal but was unhappy with the music discovery. Another thing I wasn't fond of was the almost exclusive promotion of hip-hop over other genres. With Qobuz, they push the classical, jazz, rock, country, hip hop right to the front and allow you to toggle a preference. I'm hooked - it's a great service. I have found so many cool new jazz artists and some indie rock I never would have otherwise stumbled on.

  • @ts214121

    @ts214121

    Жыл бұрын

    Sometimes tracks are omitted from soundtracks on streaming services. I couldn't listen to "Greased Lightning" on the Grease soundtrack recently on a streaming service. I ran into a similar problem with the Waiting to Exhale soundtrack.

  • @denver-gi7ot

    @denver-gi7ot

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah I just download uncompressed files and burn them to audio CDs.

  • @josexavierjr.5633
    @josexavierjr.5633 Жыл бұрын

    Great video, Randy! Physical media is the way to go! I recently downsized my music collection to CDs, along with Minidiscs, and Cassettes. I recently sold off all my Vinyl to downsize and make our move to Mexico a lot easier..... I have had CDs since 1983, back when they were about $20 a piece. Before moving, I bought up a bunch of CDs from Amazon to replace what I had on vinyl, and prices were amazingly cheap sometimes, with some discs selling for as low as $5.00 (NEW!). There are many albums that have been remastered and re-released by many classic rock artists, and sound better than they ever did on vinyl. I have the Audiolab 6000CDT and Teac Tascam Pro CD recorder as well for backup; I also have a Pioneer universal disc player for my SACDs and DVD-Audio, that still works really well. My CD collection is hovering around 2700 discs, so I think I'm good for a while, and I do my fair share of streaming as well.

  • @MIB_63
    @MIB_63 Жыл бұрын

    Great video! I'm like you. I have a big cd collection that I listen to regularly. Not just because they sound better than when I stream the same music but also because I love the physical experience of holding the cds in my hand, enjoying the artwork, reading the lyrics/liner notes etc. I have converted most of my cds to mp3 files and have burned numerous compilations that I play regularly. But I also listen to Spotify via Apple TV using quality interconnects replayed via my HiFi sound system. But nothing beats physical media.

  • @djhavenm
    @djhavenm Жыл бұрын

    Another reason to buy CD's--the booklets. I loved the liner notes found on vinyl from the 50s and 60s, but it began to disappear in favor of artwork. The artwork is still very noticeable on CDs and the CD booklet brought back the liner notes for a while. Lots of great information about the artist, lyrics, the whole bit.

  • @j3ffn4v4rr0

    @j3ffn4v4rr0

    Жыл бұрын

    Yeah, now for music that's intended really only for streaming, the "cover art" is designed with the same philosophy as an app icon...super simplistic and easy-to-read as a small square among many others on a screen. It's kinda sad.

  • @DavidEVogel

    @DavidEVogel

    Жыл бұрын

    Digital booklets?

  • @ArtHoward

    @ArtHoward

    Жыл бұрын

    I liked how Def Leppard would write a personal "what we've been up to since the last album" message. At least they did in Hysteria. Metallica wrote personal messages, too (had the same managers as Def Leppard).

  • @deadandburied7626

    @deadandburied7626

    Жыл бұрын

    And bonus tracks 👍🏻

  • @rodzilla47
    @rodzilla47 Жыл бұрын

    I still buy CD's! I had 3 delivered yesterday. Until recently, I was playing them on an Oppo BDP-105 but upgraded to a Cambridge Audio CXC transport and an Ares II DAC. To me, the transport/DAC combination is the best way to go as it is easier to upgrade when newer technology appears. I always enjoy your videos and I still don't drink coffee.

  • @TheJohnnyNormal

    @TheJohnnyNormal

    Жыл бұрын

    I got the Cambridge recently as well, running through Qutest, damn fine transport.

  • @lucasrem

    @lucasrem

    Жыл бұрын

    You need a better source! CD's are bad codecs! or are you some of the grid freak too? DIESEL generator music ??

  • @TheJohnnyNormal

    @TheJohnnyNormal

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucasrem Coal burner, diesel is for children. The thick black smoke makes things more relaxing.

  • @rodzilla47

    @rodzilla47

    Жыл бұрын

    @@lucasrem What????

  • @jmad627
    @jmad627 Жыл бұрын

    I bought two, used Pioneer DV 563a to play my CDs. One is connected to a vintage Pioneer SX-780, and the other to a Reissong A-10. Both of them sound great. I have lots of CDs to play. As I’m relatively new to audiophile stuff I always had plenty of records and CDs.

  • @idolhanz9842
    @idolhanz9842 Жыл бұрын

    In 1983 I bought my first CD in Tokyo Japan when I was flying a mission for the USAF. Rolling Stones Tatoo You album . An EMI release, it was one of the first selected to become a CD ! Ive gor it! 40 years later, the Stone's Tatoo You album is re-released on vinyl. Full circle.

  • @livingreflection5
    @livingreflection5 Жыл бұрын

    I just started rebuying all my old music as CDs again. I learned one important lesson about used CDs though. Make sure you are purchasing the latest, remastered copy of classic albums. Huge difference!

  • @madmuselle

    @madmuselle

    Жыл бұрын

    Can you tell me why it’s better to purchase the latest version, rather than the oldest ? Thank you :)

  • @blackporscheroadster6415

    @blackporscheroadster6415

    Жыл бұрын

    @@madmuselle Technology improved, so sound quality is just better and the remaster cleans it all up and improves separation. I have some old CDs from the 1990s which sound awful. The Brown album by Orbital springs to mind. I have even copied it to software and cleaned it up myself and the difference is amazing.

  • @rickweddig9764
    @rickweddig9764 Жыл бұрын

    I own 20 400 and 300 Sony Megadisc changers that I have loaded with over 7000 cds that I have collected over the past 20 years from thrift stores and a local used music store. The cd players are wired into 2 home theater setups. I keep the empty cases organized alphabetically on shelves, and also keep track of what I have on the Discogs app,which puts a value on my collection and individual cds. It's been a great hobby for me. I listen to the music while reading books, watching sports. I am always finding something I like that I don't have every Saturday when I do my thrift store searches.

  • @leftyguyiam

    @leftyguyiam

    Жыл бұрын

    Rick, I have been giving the eye to those mega changers you have. My big issue with my CD collection is simply logistics. It would be so nice to have them already loaded into a machine. Just when I am about to pull the trigger, I read some "audiophile" guys remarks how anything less than a $4000 dollar dedicated CD player is total crap and I wither. I need to quit reading that stuff. You have just inspired me. Thanks!

  • @rickweddig9764

    @rickweddig9764

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leftyguyiam With the exception of the first 2 300 disc Sony Megadisc changers I bought new from Circuit City, the others I found used; one at a pawn shop, the others thrift store finds costing me from 15 to 85 dollars. They're all over 12 years old. Some seemed to hardly been used, others have dented and damaged cases. Like most other components with moving parts, they have rubber belts the size of rubber bands that stretch and fall off or break eventually. There are belts available online, and I have replaced them in probably half of the machines. When I am not listening to newly found cds on the machine I'm filling, I listen to a pair of other machines playing random tracks,taking turns with no interruption of music playing. The quality of the music to my now elderly ears from the Megadisc changers seems very good; compared to play on a blu-ray player I hear no difference, and better of course than cassettes or most vinyl. I have a 5 year old Onkyo TX-NR656 powering Klipsch speakers bought new in my living room and a Yamaha RX-V671(found for 6 bucks at a thrift!)in my bedroom hooked up to a mostly Infinity SL speakers setup. Good luck!

  • @rickweddig9764

    @rickweddig9764

    Жыл бұрын

    The Sony Megadisc changers all have digital optical/toslink output so you can add a DAC if desired.

  • @leftyguyiam

    @leftyguyiam

    Жыл бұрын

    @@rickweddig9764 Rick, thanks so much for the reply. As I mentioned, you have totally inspired me! I see these Sony mega capacity machines on eBay, Craigslist etc and they just make so much sense. You also answered a question I had... If they had a digital out. I need to figure out how to run the system in a series... both to an external DAC and to my receiver. Maybe my 59 year old ears would not be able to tell the difference with the onboard DACs in the Sony machines VS my cheap-ass external Andover Songbird DAC but it is 20 years newer. It sounds great to me. I will also try to figure out how to replace belts on these older machines. I try to visualize what you have created- I am in awe!

  • @rickweddig9764

    @rickweddig9764

    Жыл бұрын

    @@leftyguyiam I have 63 and a half year old ears,have worn hearing aids for year and a half for upper range hearing loss and tinnitus. So how good some media ,audio system sounds is personal, but I certainly enjoy what I have going.

  • @TT-df9hp
    @TT-df9hp Жыл бұрын

    I sold my CD collection about 10 years ago, only left with a few now. I keep all my music in FLAC on an HDD whilst also keeping a backup on an external HDD just in case.

  • @HEADBANGEREN
    @HEADBANGEREN Жыл бұрын

    Great video!!! Agree on all except no. 6. The last one was the best one!

  • @j.f.johnson7843
    @j.f.johnson7843 Жыл бұрын

    I’m still buying CD’s and get excited over a thrift store bin full of them. A good DAC makes all the difference. Still run across some that are poorly recorded but no big deal to just chunk them! Went to a thrift store yesterday and found some nice records but they were all overpriced. They had no CD’s 😩

  • @mrmuffer69

    @mrmuffer69

    Жыл бұрын

    Our local Goodwill has priced used CD's upwards of $8.00, they all used to be $2.00. Savers thrift is still at 1.99 for most CD's. but their vinyl prices are 3.99

  • @squallywally
    @squallywally Жыл бұрын

    It is fun making mix CDs. Like the jcard of days gone by, I make CD outer sleeves using heavy weight card stock and print up some cool artwork and fold it up like a mini album cover to hand out to my friends. I like to use Verbatum's Digital Vinyl blank Cds, I print custom labels and it looks like a tiny 45 record. ps. I still make mixtapes.

  • @davediaz5127

    @davediaz5127

    Жыл бұрын

    I loved mix tapes, and mix cds, then mixed USB drives....

  • @pnichols6500

    @pnichols6500

    Жыл бұрын

    I have an older Epson printer that holds printable CDs (if they are even made anymore) and with the software, you could make pretty cool CDs, plus the software will print jewel case labels that look commercial quality.

  • @subliminalvibes

    @subliminalvibes

    Жыл бұрын

    I still throw my favourite tracks from various CDs on to Minidisc to listen on-the-go.

  • @stuarthirsch
    @stuarthirsch Жыл бұрын

    I really love my CDs, DVDs, and Blu Rays. The best part is that they are high resolution physical media. That means that they will work anytime, anywhere. No internet connection required. No commercials. Mine to hear and watch anytime. Playable on all devices with a DVD player. Only viable options for a prepping SHTF entertainment scenario. Don't need to worry if I switch cable carriers. I still own the content.and royalties have been paid. If I buy a CD holder a large collection can be stored in a very small space. The cases can be recycled.

  • @alfredalcala8916
    @alfredalcala8916 Жыл бұрын

    where has this channel been all my life? Glad i found it!

  • @mikesmith5389
    @mikesmith5389 Жыл бұрын

    Congratulations Randy on the most sensible audio video I've seen in a long time. I go back a long long way and, apart from a rocky beginning, CDs have always been my media of choice. Vinyl is a pain with the setting up of tone arm and cartridge and still getting unavoidable tracking distortion on the inner tracks, not to mention the snap crackle and pop and lack of dynamic range. I HATE streaming, physical media makes you connect more with the music and not only that, IT DOES SOUND BETTER it really does. Apart from all that CDs are a bargain buy these days, I can't believe how cheap they are compared to way back when, so thanks again for the video, I couldn't have put it better myself 👍

  • @garyfain7235
    @garyfain7235 Жыл бұрын

    Randy, another great review! Over the past 5 years I have been buying new and used CDs. Even vinyl duplicates. Vinyl is better but CDs are way more convenient. I have about 200 and will continue to buy. Almost pulled the plug in the “Faces” first album, but it was $27…will wait for a used one to come up on eBay. Your reviews are informative and entertaining, keep up the good work

  • @lobbymccawker2083

    @lobbymccawker2083

    Жыл бұрын

    There is a boxset of The Faces albums and it was cheap too. Maybe pick that up.

  • @kurtburkhardt5862
    @kurtburkhardt5862 Жыл бұрын

    CD's are fun, and they sound great! Have been collecting them since I bought my first player in 1985. I have a Marantz CD recorder now and just picked up a used Sony BlueRay player for $7.00 at Goodwill based on your recomendation. It plays CD's and BlueRays great and has a digital output Physical media will always have a place even if the market is small.

  • @scottboettcher1344
    @scottboettcher13443 ай бұрын

    This video really spoke to me. I have two 7'-tall CD cabinets, 13 shelves each, each shelf holding about 90 CDs, and maybe another 300 in piles on my fireplace hearth. My vinyl collection could be measured in yards (I'm 64), and when Oppo pulled out of the player market I bought two more used "backup" BDP-103 players, should be set for my remaining time on this rock. I bought my first Apple TV a few months ago, and am just starting to play with Apple Music streaming service, it can be convenient but after my miserable experience with sirius xm in my new 2018 car, I'm glad I have a bunch of CDs.

  • @KenIn_NH
    @KenIn_NH Жыл бұрын

    Great segment! And couldn't agree more. My current collection of 1300ish disc's is right there at arms length in my studio. Won't ever get rid n if them. Especially when there's no liner notes for digital media. My knowledge of music , artists , recording etc is heavily influenced by all that reading!

  • @cheapaudioman

    @cheapaudioman

    Жыл бұрын

    Well said!

  • @wal
    @wal Жыл бұрын

    Great video and I concur! CD's are awesome and have been since they first came out 👍

  • @djstumpy7399
    @djstumpy7399 Жыл бұрын

    Great video. I've just recently parted ways with 300 Cds and regret not keeping some, took me years to build that collection of my own personal tastes. Ones I didn't like were the rereleases that you can hear the compression

  • @djstumpy7399

    @djstumpy7399

    Жыл бұрын

    One thing I love is being able to pop the disc on , get the insert and read through the lyrics or checkout the artwork.

  • @hamisharchibald5270
    @hamisharchibald5270 Жыл бұрын

    I like the sound of vinyl on a good system. I find listening to music that is Spotify & then Bluetooth it to listening in your vehicle (car). The advantage of doing that is you don't need to carry a lot extra equipment.

  • @LeonardChurch33
    @LeonardChurch33 Жыл бұрын

    I'm glad I got ahead of the curve on this one. I've been getting back into collecting CDs over the last couple years and I'm up to a collection of about 300. I've paid $1 each for most of them and I have a vintage Onkyo CD changer with an amazing built-in DAC that I picked up for $30.

  • @Harald_Reindl

    @Harald_Reindl

    Жыл бұрын

    300 isn't that much given that I collected 200 from 1991 to 1999 where I stopped to use physical media when I can have my whole library on a hard drive with dozens of backups spread all over the country

  • @LeonardChurch33

    @LeonardChurch33

    Жыл бұрын

    @@Harald_Reindl you're right, for a lot of people it's not that many, especially those that have been collecting for a long time. But considering I had maybe 20 at the start of 2021 I'd say it was pretty explosive growth.

  • @Harald_Reindl

    @Harald_Reindl

    Жыл бұрын

    @@LeonardChurch33 well, my digital library has grown by 50000 tracks in 2022 :-)

  • @angelOcrisu
    @angelOcrisu Жыл бұрын

    I just recently decided to return to CD after two years of only streaming.( Wiim mini I bought after your review and it's good) As you say, there is a satisfaction getting the cd out of the box and put it on the tray. So today I've got out to the daylight my old dvd player and will connecting it to the zen one dac through coaxial cable. Back in the day only bought techno and r&b. Now I listen to alternative rock, vocal jazz and indie/ folk. So I have to buy some CDs for a small collection. I started with the first albums of Guns&Roses and Oasis just to try the sound. Omg it sounds better that tidal. CD has higher bitrate at 1400 kbps than often lower then 1k on tidal at hifi tier.

  • @dwcinnc
    @dwcinnc Жыл бұрын

    Since the early seventies I have always copied my purchased media for the car. It began with my 8-track tape recorder. A few years later I switched to cassettes. I copied my factory CDs to cassette tapes up until the advent of recordable CDs in the nineties. Now, there is streaming and the ability to rip CDs to an iPhone. But you are correct, it is fun. After all I have been doing it for 50 years.

  • @M3LTUP
    @M3LTUP Жыл бұрын

    I collect CDs too. 1-The sound quality is better than streaming. 2-I like owning the physical media. One day CDs will have a renaissance just like vinyl. And people will wish they bought them when they were $5-10.

  • @christopherviers8302
    @christopherviers8302 Жыл бұрын

    Nice video... One subject that most people don't discuss is "CD rot"... or the fact of bronzing, which greatly reduces the shelf life of CDs. I recently gave away my CD collection (3,000+) to a close friend, who I know will make good use of them... He and I both noticed that every so often, one of the CDs had become blotchy and glitchy, basically unplayable... I live in the tropics, so I can attest to the reality of CD rot - high temps/high humidity will definitely put the hurt on your CDs, after an extended period of time. This being said, it might behoove anyone, who's personally invested in and takes pride in their CD collection, to make an extra effort, when storing their CDs... "Discs last longest when stored in plastic cases in a cool, dark, dry environment. (NIST recommends that for CD's and DVD's, relative humidity should be in the range of 20%-50% and temperatures should be in the range of 4C-20C). Because gravity can gradually bend the disc, storing it upright like a book is best for long-term storage." Having access to "streaming" has really softened the blow of my giving away my CDs, but just as Mr. Cheapaudioman mentioned concerning the tactile aspect, I do miss having them filling up the room in a way...

  • @dkeener13

    @dkeener13

    Жыл бұрын

    I haven't experienced rot at all, but I live in a dry climate. one thing I'll note though, all disc readers are not equal. and price is not the separator here, it's more research and trial and error to find the ones that can read anything you throw at them.

  • @eximusic
    @eximusic Жыл бұрын

    Yes, I agree. My CDs sound better than streaming Amazon HD through my Bluesound Node (VPN fed) and both going through the same DAC. That's my experience and it's consistent.

  • @jn3750

    @jn3750

    Жыл бұрын

    not when steaming via USB!

  • @eximusic

    @eximusic

    Жыл бұрын

    @@jn3750 I'm a musician first, audiophile second. I like album art, the conceptual side, lyrics, credits, etc. And all in one handy place when I put the album on. And I often listen to albums instead of songs. Having said that I stream a lot now just because of the convenience.

  • @indiaretro6515
    @indiaretro6515 Жыл бұрын

    Very well said cheapaudioman, I still buy and collect vinyl/CD of music. As nothing beats physical audio, because some Audio is not released on to Digital platforms.

  • @germansestopal6167
    @germansestopal6167 Жыл бұрын

    Excellent video. Thank you. Which portable CD player do you recommend?

  • @dmcbain44
    @dmcbain44 Жыл бұрын

    Albums disappear from streaming services all the time and it annoys the hell out of me. At one point Nirvana’s Incesticide disappeared from my streaming service. I found a copy at the first used book store I went to for $4.99. I haven’t been able to stream Deguello by ZZ Top for a couple of years. Found a brand new copy at Barnes and Noble yesterday for $10.99. Another album that I discovered on streaming that has now disappeared from all streaming services but I can’t even find in any format is The Ecstatic by Mos Def.

  • @redstang5150

    @redstang5150

    Жыл бұрын

    This defines the issue with streaming audio and video services. These services aren't archival libraries that have access to the content forever, so if something is rarely getting played they don't want to pay the licensing for it anymore and it is gone. Nothing beats having your own library that is forever yours.

  • @davidwald2938

    @davidwald2938

    Жыл бұрын

    I consider Duegello one of their best and its the album that introduced me to ZZ Top in the 80's. I noticed it went away too and was glad I had the cd. Wish I still had the album. Replaced them all with cd and gave away 500 vinyls 25 yrs. ago because cd easier to tote when moving (sigh)

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