Looking forward to getting home and un-rapping an album was a thrill. Some albums came with some really cool shit inside.
I loved that process, but I could rarely wait. So I still have memories of actually doing all the unwrapping and reading on long bus journeys home.
Once, I found a purse on the bus with about £45 in it which was a small fortune in 1981. Well, it was for me as I was unemployed. I headed straight to the shopping centre and blew the whole lot on records ! I seem to recall "Kiss-Alive !" and Thin Lizzy's "Live and dangerous" being among the spoils.
The thing I miss about albums is the whole process...the large artwork, the liner notes, the sitting down and playing the entire side at one sitting, and then flipping for th either side...
...it was a ritual.
As much as I loved the process, the one thing I never liked was having to get up from my comfort to flip the record over.
Yeah, I agree with both of you. I wouldn't actually go get a turntable and start a record collection.
Me neither. Having already done it on 3 major occasions. Now I'm not fussy. Everything goes onto tape, anyway. The last turntable I had had a cover that was smaller than the circumference of an album so you couldn't close it when an album was playing !
Dude a quarter was way too heavy. Pennies man.
I generally used a British 2 or 10 pence piece. On a particularly jumpy record, a £1 coin would suffice. I learned an interesting trick from my dad which was to cover the album surface in water, wipe slightly, balance coin, then play. Rarely failed.
That said, sometimes, the scratch appeared at a really great point and it sounded like that was part of the song. When I first heard Deep Purples' "The Mule" on 'Fireball', during Ritchie Blackmore's solo, the record jumped and repeated three times on this particular bit. I was recording it on tape so I didn't realize it was a jump. It was only a couple of years later when I got my own copy that I realized. 30+ years later, it still sounds incomplete without the scratch !
I wouldn't mind a nostalgia thread about cassettes though....fitting 2 albums on an XLII90
It wouldn't be nostalgia for me - I still do that now. I'm afraid the cassette for me is still the perfect medium. Two albums on a C90 or 3 on a 120, bliss ! And conveniently compact.