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Let’s talk collections and listening habits!

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  • #4494
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Let’s compare collection sizes and listening habits!

    COLLECTION SIZE:

    My current iTunes collection counts 2860 titles, out of which 2243 soundtracks, 202 rock/pop, 147 classical, 193 electronic, 65 jazz and 14 musical.

    There are currently 654 composer/artist folders on my harddrive, totalling 350 GB (they’re all mp3s).

    Moving on to physical, I haven’t counted in a while, but roughly 1000 CDs and 100 LPs. My film collection never grew to much, for various reasons, so guessing about 100 on DVD. A few other bits and bobs.

    ACQUISITION HABITS:

    I very, very rarely buy CDs and LPs, due to the “four threats” mentioned in this thread, which I thought would be more active.

    For new digital acquisitions, I’m in the fortunate position that I get promos, at least for soundtracks. I very rarely buy an album.

    LISTENING HABITS:

    I mostly listen to music on my laptop (which is connected to my stereo system), via iTunes. Once in a while, I play LPs and CDs. I sample stuff using Spotify and YouTube. But just sample…I have the free, ad-filled version of Spotify, which makes it cumbersome to use.

    Your turn!

    #4497
    Sigbjørn
    Deltaker

    I haven’t counted in a while as a large part of my collection is in a disarray (in boxes). A rough estimate says I have too much.

    #4513
    Nick Zwar
    Deltaker

    Collection Size/Acquisition Habits:
    When I started to seriously buy music some decades ago, I hoped that one day I’d have a satisfying library of music that means something to me, a representative selection of great classical music from every epoch as well as all the interesting important film scores. Some years ago I looked at my collection and thought: wow, well done. You got there. Not sure how much larger this will grow, but it’s pretty sufficient should I ever be cut off from new music to still bring me enjoyment for the rest of my life I guess. 🙂

    My buying habits of course changed over the years: originally, I searched the record stores and sometimes mail ordered a few albums. One didn’t even know what was out there. As far as film music was concerned, it was best to pick up new film scores when they were released, because re-releases of classic film scores weren’t a thing back then. I mostly missed the first batch of Varèse Club titles, so for me the real turning point was when FSM released STAGECOACH and FANTASTIC VOYAGE… from that point on, I would order often new expanded and remastered/restored releases of film scores via the Internet.

    Classical music is different, that was usually still available in the better selected record stores. In recent years I picked up a lot of great deals, because many labels released “boxed sets”, so that’s a lot of music. I still do buy CDs and digital downloads, though I have slowed down a bit nowadays. Not so much because of a lack of interest, but because I have a lot of music. I did pick up the Andris Nelson’s Shostakovich Cycle on Deutsche Grammophon, because Qobuz had a great deal really (around €11.- for ALL of Shostakovich’s symphonies and concertos in — as far as I can tell so far — excellent performances in high-res format).

    All my CDs are ripped lossless, for legacy reasons to ALAC format. So all my digital high-res downloads are ALAC as well (except for a few multichannel albums, which are in FLAC format, and five albums in MP3 format that are just available only in that format (like the music for the first Monkey Island games… I guess “high-res” makes not sense for that music anyway. 🙂 ).
    In any case, it’s by now clearly over 100,000 lossless/high-res ALAC tracks, mostly classical music and film music, but also of course some pop/jazz/ambient/electronic/lounge music.
    The music is on external hard drives and my NAS, I don’t have any music on my actual laptop. I currently use MinimServer for music.

    Listening Habits:
    While I use iTunes to maintain and curate my collection, I don’t use it to play music. My laptop is in a docking station in my home office and is not directly hooked up to my music system. So it’s just build in speakers, not suitable for music listening.

    At home, I usually listen to music on my stereo system in the living room, where I access the music via tablet or smartphone; I listen to my own music or Qobuz. Since all my CDs are ripped lossless anyway, there isn’t really any point in putting in the actual CDs anymore, so I hardly ever do that. I do have a few playlists, mostly for “occasions” though (like sometimes, when we have guests over, play cards, or something like that), with music that is suited for that kind of thing (so it’s not necessarily “THE OMEN”, though I remember one evening where we had neighbors over who suddenly asked for “Le Sacre du Printemps”… I was happy to oblige and we heard the whole thing at rather decent volume.)

    In my car, I have a USB stick with around 350 albums in 256/320 AAC format; these tend to be selected according to what I might enjoy while driving.

    On the go or on vacation, I usually listen to music via my phone. I used to have music in AAC format on my phone, but nowadays I tend to use Qobuz with noise cancelling headphones if I listen to music, or I listen to podcasts. I tried Roon and Roon ARC for three months, which worked for me and was great, as my entire experience with Roon was quite satisfactory, but for my own use, Roon is just too expensive, so I did not continue my subscription nor bought a lifetime pass. Roon ARC was neat though, as it enabled me to listen to my entire music collection from anywhere in the world.

    #4520
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Interesting breakdown, Nick. Quite different from my situation. I feel very old-school, since there is no wireless music playing in my life, it’s all hooked up somewhere.

    #4521
    Nick Zwar
    Deltaker

    While it would be possible for me do do a wireless setup, I actually don’t stream “wireless” either. My streamer is connected via Ethernet(LAN), so it’s not going over WiFi. Just the operation is via WiFi (Tablet or Smartphone).

    #4522
    Malte Müller
    Nøkkelmester

    (like the music for the first Monkey Island games… I guess “high-res” makes not sense for that music anyway. 🙂 ).

    A real game score gourmet. I grew up with the Amiga versions. In case you didn’t know they updated the games as Special editions a few years ago and also updated the original scores.

    I’ll try to write up something as well the next days but a lot is probably quite similar.

    #4553
    Graham Watt
    Deltaker

    I think I have amassed around 1,000 film scores on CD. I don’t know how to back them up. When I want to listen to something, I put the CD in the CD player, sit down and listen. If I want to simply sample something, I’ll find it online somehow. But my CD collection has many hidden treasures within, and very often when I go back to a score I “thought I knew”, it turns out that I hardly “knew it” at all. I think I would be quite happy if no more music releases ever happened, no more films ever made, no more books ever written. The past is where I belong. It’s a foreign country. They do things differently there.

    #4554
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Your post reminds me of something, Graham — the relatively mundane issue of SPACE.

    I’ve rented a tiny, 25 sqm one-room apartment for 18 years now (well, I once owned it, now I rent it, but that’s a long and complex story that I won’t go into here). Enormously expensive, but then again it’s the fanciest neighbourhood in Norway’s capital city. But that poses certain challenges. I have room for one big CD shelf (the Ivar shelf system from IKEA) that houses my CDs. That shelf is already pretty much maxed by now, so that’s one of the reasons for why I’ve limited new acquisitions to titles that I need for completist purposes (I guess about 30-40 titles in total). The space becomes a massive limit.

    But then I’m guessing you guys have more room? Do you have special media rooms? Perhaps in the basement, if you own a house? A gentleman’s retreat that your spouse and family have allowed you? Or is it a constant negotiation to have your physical media out and about in the general area of the house/apartment?

    #4555
    Graham Watt
    Deltaker

    I have enough room for all my stuff in our fairly modest flat, Thor. In fact we have more room than ever now that our son has moved out into his own place. No special media room as such. I have books in nearly all the rooms. My CDs are in another room which kind of acts as a spare room, but the music centre as such is in the bedroom. So no, nothing’s really “on show”.

    #4576
    Malte Müller
    Nøkkelmester

    Collection size:
    My digital collection consists of 7900+ albums and 860 GB data. Of course backuped frequently. The majority MP3 or AAC for legacy reasons or priority. Otherwise I prefer lossless (ALAC being Mac user). Although I admit I neither have the ears nor the equipment to hear a difference to good encoded 320kbps MP3/AAC.

    The majority is – surprise – soundtracks from all ages. Although I tend to like older stuff most but have no general reservation against current scores or specific music styles. There is also pop/rock/electronic/jazz/classical and audio plays included.

    My physical collection is perhaps around 1000+ CDs and a few LPs (not counted…). Except LPs and CD-Rs not all are ripped yet but that’s on the list to do occasionally.

    Acquisition habits:
    I still do buy CDs of release that have some priority to me and if they are not available for download. I prefer downloads lossless from Qobuz if the price is reasonable. We also have a quite good public library that has a soundtrack section that even has/had some FSM and such… Although physical media sections got thinner there as well last time I visited.

    Listening habits:
    I still listen a lot via traditional CD player but also via Mac which is connected to the stereo system.

    I don’t have subscribed to any of the big streaming services. Our public library annual fee however includes access to a basic streaming service. It has quite some scores but of course has a rather limited catalogue for specialities. The library also includes access to the complete Naxos catalogue online but I have not used that so far.
    I also use Youtube to sample things a lot.

    As many of us I have lots of stuff I didn’t even or didn’t properly listen to yet.. I probably could also just be cut of new releases without much problems 😉

    #4582
    Nick Zwar
    Deltaker

    Or is it a constant negotiation to have your physical media out and about in the general area of the house/apartment?

    Sort of… I got my wife drunk one evening and had her sign this: CD Display Agreement between wife and husband

    #4583
    Sigbjørn
    Deltaker

    I can’t tell whether that’s a joke or not.

    #4584
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Ha! Funny, Nick. 😀

    #4626
    Thor Joachim Haga
    Nøkkelmester

    Malte, your habits sound more or less similar to mine, although your collection dwarfs mine. Almost 8000 albums? Enough for three lifetimes.

    #4634
    Malte Müller
    Nøkkelmester

    Malte, your habits sound more or less similar to mine, although your collection dwarfs mine. Almost 8000 albums? Enough for three lifetimes.

    Yeah, a lot and surely too much… and not all music as mentioned. Probably also some orphaned entries as Apple Music/iTutnes makes it unnecessarily hard to find/cleanup these. And probably I should remove a few things I haven’t managed to listen to or will never again… But since digital space is cheap…

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