I'm selling my turntable.
...and my albums.
It's been something I've been thinking about for some time. In a post some months back I wrote about how streaming and digital distribution have made CDs virtually obsolete. New cars don't even have CD players anymore, so the LP, despite a resurgence of interest in vinyl as a novelty, really is an artifact of another time.
A couple of years ago I looked at my three boxes of records and my turntable, which were on a shelf in the garage, and decided to bring them in the house. I bought a new cartridge and calibrated the turntable and set aside some time each week to revisit my favorite albums. I found I was listening with a different point of view, informed by all my experiences as a performer and producer. Along with the nostalgia and memories associated with the music I enjoyed the ritual of taking the records out of their sleeves and placing the needle. It's something like driving a vintage car, kind of clumsy but satisfying as well.
I have a lyric in a song of mine, "Classic":
"I bought this record when I was eighteen
And when I drop the needle it's a time machine"
It was great, but lately I find I'm doing it less and I've come to the conclusion that it had run its course, I've also been on a mission to simplify and focus more on my own more recent music and gigs. In a way I was paying my respects to all that great music from those amazing bands and artists, and now it was time to pass them on to someone who might appreciate them as much as I have. It's not about money, records are only worth a couple of dollars unless they are pristine and unplayed and these are certainly not that. I took good care of them, but they are, to be kind, "well loved". I'll put them on Craigslist and see if I can get a few dollars but I may just give them away.
Records for Sale |
I don't think of myself as overly sentimental, certainly not a hoarder. My attitude is that material things have value if they are useful, and used. This applies to guitars, pa and recording equipment, which is pretty much the extent of what I own. If I don't use it I don't have it. The records were an exception, one that bothered me at times, but the associations with those memories embodied with them were powerful. But there does come a time when one realizes that the past is just that, past, and the present (and future) has much to offer. Perhaps letting these go will generate some energy for a new adventure and it's necessary to travel a bit lighter to make that journey.
Credit: ESA/Hubble & NASA |
another topic dear to my heart as my impending uprooting to Wash St has me contemplating what I will be taking with me. 22 years ago when I vacated CA taking my record and CD collection with me was a no brainer, even though, at that time, it was my ambition to digitize all my albums - a mission I found incredibly daunting and time consuming (as one had to drop the needle on each song on each side of the album). Needless to say, the collection remains mostly analog as I've found that, while the desire to "have" all these old songs on my iphone for playing wherever (mostly in my car) is still there, I find my time much better spent recording and mixing my own creations (and currently I have a much larger musical project concerning live performances that I want to invest in). So.... what now? Can I jettison over 200 albums and another 200 CD's? - the CD's... well, all of them already exist on my iphone so they are strictly a backup failsafe - but you know the addage - as soon as you get rid of the backup is when your system crashes and you lose everything. But the albums - taking much more space and much harder to deal with... and yet... even though there are many I haven't listened to in years, there is a part of me that wants to hear them again and in so doing, return to my digitization process.. Yikes! Am I looking backwards? To an extent; but I find inspiration and ideas from the golden age of rock music and sometimes it's just a chord progression, or a line of lyric that can ignite the creative spark.
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