My Love of Vintage Stereo Equipment. New Turntable.
I have a love for vintage stereo equipment. Nowadays a phone and Bluetooth speaker more than suffice and saves us a lot of space. However, nothing beats the sound of those classic hi-fi stereo systems and the warm sound of vinyl complete with those soft pops and crackles 🤣 Seriously though, it's just a completely different sound.
I've been thinking about picking up a turntable. Although I haven't had a record player for some time, I never sold my vinyl records. It's been a long time since I've listened to my records and many of them are discontinued and really hard to find in MP3 format.
Today, while cleaning out the basement I found one of my old turntables tucked away in the corner covered in about an inch of dust. I plugged it in and to my surprise, the turntable began to spin. This thing must have been in my basement since I was a teenager and long forgotten.
I brought it up to my apartment and plugged it into my Yamaha HTR-5630 receiver that I picked up at a garage sale for $5 and nothing. No sound. I used the auxiliary connections and figured I needed a pre-amp. I dug around in some old electronics I had piled up in a junk drawer, plugged it into the pre-amp and there was sound!
I figured at the very least I'd need a needle, but even that seems to be fine! I may order one anyway. It's a Pioneer turntable with a Stanton needle on it, I'm guessing I should be able to find a replacement. Fingers crossed. I had an old Fischer turntable from the 70s that I had to let go of because I couldn't find a needle for it.
My musical tastes lean more towards jazz, blues, and big band when listening to vinyl. In the greater scheme of things, it's how the musician and studio intended it. You're hearing it the way it was produced when it was first released. On top of that, as I mentioned earlier, vinyl just has a much deeper, warmer sound. Some people can't get past the occasional crackle and pop of an old record, but I believe it just adds to its charm and the general ambiance of the vinyl experience.
Another thing I love about vinyl is that you can usually find really inexpensive albums at thrift stores, garage sales, and even at some of the lower-end used record shops. I once came across a vintage copy of Donovan's Season of the Witch in a record store for $5. At the time, you couldn't touch that album for under $500! That one got resold though 😁
So I guess I have one more thing to collect and post about now. Expect some vinyl posts soon as I add them to my collection. I may even start reselling vinyl online. I currently only have about 50 records or so. I'll post more about those in a future post.
Well, that was my lucky find of the day. Now I'm just going to chill out, clean the house a bit and listen to some vinyl! Cheers.
Living that High Fidelity life :)
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It's cool that it still worked. I have an old Technics that needed a new belt a few years back. It probably needs a new stylus too, but I don't use it too much. I use an old receiver as the preamp. We still have most of our records and I've acquired a few new ones that were special editions. I just don't have room for many more.
Enjoy the music.
!PIZZA
This one is direct-drive which is probably why it still works. There was another belt drive beneath this one, but the belt snapped as soon as I plugged it in. Dry rotted 🤣 I was pretty shocked when this one started spinning without issue.
Space is always an issue. I'm already trying to figure out the best way to store more records. One of the nice things about MP3s and streaming services, is they don't take up any room other than hard drive space 🤣 One of the reasons I've put off buying a turntable.
!PIZZA
My CD and LP shelves are pretty full. I don't worry too much about the format though as it's the music that matters. I buy a fair few downloads and I'm supporting artists via Bandcamp. I did buy a fairly expensive special edition vinyl from one of my favourites. I won't get it for a couple of months though.
!BEER
I've got a CD shelf filled with mostly 90s alternative rock. I can't remember the last time I played my cd's. Now you've got my curious about going through all that. I used to be a huge audiophile. I may have to start again. 🤣
I'm actually starting to get tired of all the streaming services, that was sort of what brought a lot of this on. 😂
That's awesome that you support independent artists like that. I've bought a few downloads on Bandcamp too. One of the great things about modern music, computers, and mp3. People can create, produce and promote themselves now. Much different than the days of vinyl where you had to hope a record label would record you 🤣 or be rich enough to rent a studio and have your vinyl pressed then good luck distributing it. Absolutely incredible times we're living in!
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BEER
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I've never heard that style of music with vinyl, how beautiful it must sound.
To me, it seems to have a much deeper and richer sound.
Listening right now, and it does :)
This post makes me so happy. I have a couple of "modern" turntables and a sizable vinyl collection as well, and I love seeing others remember just how much better the sound is.
I also have a larger number of even older phonographs, the old spring powered wind up Victor's and such that play 78rpm records (and the records to go with them). I have records dating back to the 1800s.
I really hope you get your turntable working!
Sounds like a great collection of music. I love a lot of different music too. Those old wind-ups were pretty wild. You don't see or get to hear those very often, unless you own one. I always forget about the old 78s.
This is great dear friend @the-bitcoin-dood without a doubt, there is no better sound fidelity than vinyl records.
I also have a collection of them, for some time I wanted to get a record player to delight myself with good music
that you enjoy it a lot
Record players are really worth the investment IMHO. Sometimes you can get lucky and find one cheap at a garage sale or thrift shop. All my vintage equipment came from garage sale finds. Just make sure you can find a needle for the record player you buy, but a quick Google or Presearch search can take care of that for you.
People really spent/spend hundreds of dollars on a single album? I have not heard about such a thing so far. But I have not bought any vinyl record either so far. I heard it only in movies and on digital audio recordings so far.
Yes, yes they do! Some old vinyl is worth thousands. You have to know what you're looking for though.
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