I'm thinking that youngsters are getting burned .


I was thinking that youngsters and the financially challenged are getting burned by the audio press. Do they know that they can have music in the home cheaply? A Rega-Planar 3(or according to some, a Music Hall turntable) and maybe 20 pre-1982 albums will get music in the home, period. You don't have to have the big bucks. What I would like to discuss is those 20 albums. The idea came to me as I was listening to Gerry Rafferty's "City to City". I would include 3 Beatles' albums, their White album, "Abbey Road", and "Magical Mystery Tour"(don't buy these from a store-too expensive.). I have, at least, a class C cd player, and I suggest that you can get music cheaper.
mmakshak

Showing 1 response by kthomas

I think the young definitely understand that they can have music in the home cheaply - they understand internet radio stations. My 16-year-old son has the most diverse tastes in music of anybody I've ever met - whenever I walk by his room, music is playing, often something I've never heard before, usually catching my ear. He pumps it all through his boom-box, which wouldn't be my choice, but he seems to really enjoy it. He got that as a present, I pay for the internet connection - near as I can tell, he has a rich music-loving life and spends zero on it.

Whether he will ever upgrade the sound quality, who knows. My guess is that it will be a while before he thinks about spending any money on even modest equipment, so long as the free stream of music continues. It's fun, though, since we share music opinions often.