Same reason as some people will spend 20,000 for a bottle of rare liquor but not for…(fill in with your favourite obsession)Trying to understand the logic - people are ok to pay 4000/- for an original bollywood pressing containing one movie with 8 songs. But the same person won't pay 400/- for 2 bollywood CD with 16 songs.
The same reason why people pay millions for a verified antique. There should be an (market inflated) intrinsic value that the item must have - real or imagined. Not to mention the confirmation bias that comes with my things we buy. A blind test might tell the truth, but in this case ignorance might be bliss
unfortunately , Nowadays, I still can't find the CDs versions of those I'm looking for.Trying to understand the logic - people are ok to pay 4000/- for a original bollywood pressing containing one movie with 8 songs. But the same person won't pay 400/- for 2 bollywood CD with 16 songs.
It’s still civil and polite in tone. Opinions being shared, discussed and questioned. Censoring this at this stage would have a chilling effect on any discussions.@mods May please close this thread for further response. The conversation is taking turn into argumentative territory.
yes. I have both for many albums and the cd sucks for anything before 80s. most vinyls sound far better.Trying to understand the logic - people are ok to pay 4000/- for a original bollywood pressing containing one movie with 8 songs. But the same person won't pay 400/- for 2 bollywood CD with 16 songs.
Nowadays I download music from saregama.comunfortunately , Nowadays, I still can't find the CDs versions of those I'm looking for.
Since 1979, all Vinyls have undergone one or more Digital process before they land on the turntable.But Aren’t vinyl pressings today made from digital recordings?
Except for a few companies most records do not mention if the source was compressed or not.
I saw this discussion online: https://www.vinylengine.com/turntable_forum/viewtopic.php?t=106826
a 4.5x over a 13-year period increase translates into an increase of 12% every year. Adjusted for rupee depreciation of about 5% every year, the effective increase will be about 7% every year. Once you factor customs duty, gst impact etc, the real effective increases will be about 4-5%. Now you can take a call if this is reasonable.Depends on what you define as ridiculously expensive equipment. Lets take a look at a basic Bookshelf speaker from Wharfedale.
When the Diamond 9.1 launched, it was a sub 10000 speaker in 2009-2010. I remember gifting one to a friend getting into the hobby. In another 13 years, the current model is Diamond 12.1 and it costs 45000 a pair. That is a more than 4.5x increase in a 13 year period.
Would you classify the 12.1 as expensive? I certainly would considering the fact that 9.1 was a very affordable entry into the hobby not so long ago.
One thing I'd agree as a bonus though is the cost of music - Spotify/Youtube Music/Apple Music has democratized the cost of listening to your favorite music to almost nothing now compared to buying expensive CDs earlier.
I hope you do know many of the Saregama are not even CD quality. they sound like upsampled Mp3s ?Nowadays I download music from saregama.com
Amazing design!This blurs the line between analog and digital…