Contemplating vinyl, How hard is it to get LPs?



This may sound lame, but I've been "digital only" now
for 10 years. I was thinking about getting a Rega
Planar 3 and going back. So as stupid as it may
sound, I wanted to get a feeling for how hard it
would be to start an LP collection of 70s/80s
music?

Rolling Stones, Van Halen, Journey, Don Henley,
Aerosmith, Boston.. These are the bands I would
be looking for. Are LPs readily Mail Orderable
and or is it a scavenger hunt kind of process?

How much do LPs cost these days? Are they pressing
new music on LP?

Thanks
Tom
eastside_guy

Showing 2 responses by pcanis

Even though the garage sale-thrift store sources are kind of starting to dry up a bit, you can still shop around if you live in any kind of reasonably populated area and find 70-80's rock quite easily. I run out to a thrift store once a week or so, and I always find stuff like that. be prepared to find 1/7 interesting classic rock, and 6/7 Melachrino Strings, Inspirational, Perry Como, Neil Diamond, et alia.

If you live in a semi-urban area, at least a few local record stores will have tons of old used records still lying around.

Then there is the new vinyl and reissue vinyl. I just recently picked up a couple of the new Led Zep re-issues. Excellent sound, packaging. Plus, tons and tons of new artists put out there stuff on high-quality vinyl. If you are into any kind of music that would be used for techno-rave-club music, that stuff HAS to be out on vinyl, and no joke, there is a store downtown from where I live that is almost nothing BUT vinyl, row after row of indie electronica and drum and bass, etc.

In a word: one of the most fun things I've done in recent years is get back into the vinyl. The used stuff is still out there in decent abundance, and the reissue and new stuff just keeps coming and coming.

Ps: if you play used records, make sure you get a cartridge that has a fine stylus. I just changed from a medium-sized stylus cartridge (Grado Red) to a fine-sized one (AT 440ml) and the difference in surface-noise elimination is astounding.

pcanis
about being able to tell ok used vinyl from ruined used vinyl: I think it is an acquired art. M. Fremer from Stereophile and other audio magazines said once he brings a jeweler's loup and one of the those headbands with a lamp on it (that doctor's use) to scrutinize used records. Of course, that still leaves unanswered as to exactly *what* he is looking for. Dweller above is all too correct: sometimes a record can look fine, but can actually be ruined. All it takes is a few plays with a horridly old ragged needle, I suppose, to do untold microscopic damage.

But my local used-vinyl store dealer tells me he can tell by looking ata record whether it is in ok shape or not. Not sure if he uses a microscope or what. He won't tell me!!!! (He is trying to keep my business, hehe)

BTW, never judge a record completely until it has been thoroughly cleaned. You would not believe the mold and gunk that can lodge deep into a records grooves if that album has been sitting around for 10 or 20 years in some damp garage.

pcanis