What's in your CDP tonight? the minority report


I enjoy vinyl and digital (lately, with recent changes, vinyl actually sounds better than digital to me), BUT given what seems an overall preference for analog/vinyl on A'gon, I'm curious what the non-vinyl "1/2" is listening to. I tried to see if this was a previously posted question. Did not seem so.

This evening for me, it's Genesis (definitive edition remaster) "A Trick of the Tail".

128x128ghosthouse
Thanks everyone for their interest and comments regarding Tumbleweed Connection and other Elton John music and bio. arcam88 recommended this dics while I visited his home a few weeks ago. I've actually been spinning his copy - but was fortunate to pickup my own yesterday at my local shop, Phil's Records. He had the remastered disc in stock. 

I like all forms of music media, however the best thing about owning CD's (or LP's) is the cover art and the liner notes. Tumbleweed Connection comes with a 12 page sepia colour book chock full of lyrics, liner notes. In fact, some songs from this albumn have been covered by some well known artist. James Taylor's sister Kate, Rod Stweart, Phil Collins and Sting. This compilation was released in 1995. 

"...Gus Dudgeon: All of the  tapes used to create these new masters are the original mixes. However, due to the fact that many of the tapes are at least 25 years old, they have "softened up" to varying degrees. So, the sound has been passed the most up to date digital processing equipment, at 20 bit Resolution: namely The Sadie Digital System and Prism Super Noise Shaper. The effects purely to "enhance" rather than "colour" the sound. 
As the original producer, I would have used this equipment at the time, had it been available for mastering. The very nature of analogue recordings being transfered to vinyl demanded major compromises. With the benefits of digital sound these constraints are removed, and the recordings can be heard much closer to the reproduction we had originally intended..."

Elton has said of 'Tumbleweed Connection' : "Lyrically and melodically, that's one of our most perfect albumns". 

(ghosthouse, sorry if I hijacked your thread) 

N
Nutty - Apology completely unnecessary.  You are very welcome here and I've appreciated your posts and input.  People talking about what digitally formatted music they are listening to and WHY they like it is what I hoped would happen with this thread.  BTW I'm planning to get the remastered Honky Chateau and Tumbleweed Connection from The Classic Years series.  

oblgny - Madman Across the Water as an 8th grade record review!  Well done.  Must say, you are dating ME!  8th grade woulda had to have been been The Beatles or maybe Simon & Garfunkel "Bookends".  Why the latter comes to mind is I remember our 8th grade Spanish teacher (younger guy) coming in one day with a copy of Bookends and playing the whole thing for us.  Had NOTHING to do with learning Spanish.  Based on personal experience years later, am guessing he might have been at a party the night before and had a revelation revolving around that album.   It would be a hoot to read your record review now.  Post it here!  
he's decades past relevance, and was never hip in the first place, but tumbleweed connection is unarguably a great record--just pulled it out to listen to with my jaded ex-skatepunk bride, who wholly agrees with the foregoing.
also in queue is steven wilson--hand,cannot, erase--highly recommended prog rock for people like myself that don't especially like prog rock
I got to see EJ with his original band around the time of Tumbleweed Connection (70-71), and they pleased me greatly. My interest in him soon thereafter evaporated, he appearing to me to be more of an entertainer than an artist, if you know what I mean. Nothing wrong with mere entertainment---I love ABBA!
ghosthouse...

Actually my review, or at least my attempt at a review, was for 11/17/70 not Madman Across The Water. Fortunately I have long since lost that first attempt at becoming a writer, let alone a critic.  I remember vaguely re-reading it during my high school years and feeling my skin crawl in repulsion. It was THAT awful. 

I just turned 60 late last year. Older and wiser now than ever before, I am thankful that I at least had the sense to pursue other endeavors in which I was better equipped to succeed at. 
(None of which were obvious at the time.)

Another Ralph J. Gleason I would not become!