Why the woofer moves badly when playing certain LPs


Hello. First greeting.
My turntable is Pro-Ject The classic, Phono is Lejonklou Gaio2.4 and Cartridge is AT150sa.

However, I am having problems with my woofer moving badly when playing certain LPs.
Generally, this is not the case with the older, dusty LPs of the 80's, but rather with the record just new released LPs.

I want to get help from someone who knows why this is happening.
Sorry for my broken English.
Thank you very much.

starbusters
@mijostyn  I highly doubt that mastering lathes are to blame- too much is at stake! I have yet to buy a new LP and run into anything like this; OTOH many of the new LPs I've bought seem to have deeper bass than many of the older LPs (I like electronic music...). I did run into one LP which was overcut, causing distortion on bass notes, but overcutting is simply a mastering error on the part of the mastering engineer. 
One fairly simple explanation for the complaint is the cartridge has compliance too high for the mass of the tonearm.
Have you looked at the records to ensure they don't have any warping, or that they are sitting flat?
You are getting the woofers pumping due to feedback.  The stylus is picking up the airborne sound and re-amplifying it.  Either relocate your turntable, try different platforms and if all else fails, buy a KAB Rumble Filter for $179.00 from KAB. That is what I had to do and now I am a very happy camper. 
Welcome starbusters to the whacky world of analog playback, where everyone has a theory and the laws of the universe believe it or not actually allow all the seemingly conflicting theories to be right. Is it right to leave the dust cover on? No. Except when it is. Or yes- except when its not!

Are you even having a problem? Yes, if it bothers you. No, if it doesn't. A certain amount of very low frequency woofer excursion with records is perfectly normal. Its also perfectly normal that some records are better than others. Not just in this but in every conceivable way. Sorry, ESL, conceivable means every way you can think of. 

There's things you can do to have less. stereo5 mentioned acoustic feedback which he should know is not what you have but remember the whacky universe he is right its something that can be a problem. Just not in your case. Also probably not in your case is record warp. Really obvious warp you can see. Less obvious is dips and bumps that are hard to see. But it doesn't take much, a tiny invisible dip when amplified comes out a half an inch at the woofer. Sometimes a record clamp might help.

Sorry but you just never know. That's why you get five, ten different guesses. Any one or all of them could be right. Or wrong.

Only way to know for sure is to learn by trying. If the woofer moves a lot but doesn't rattle the house and doesn't bottom out the voice coil I recommend write it off as just another one of vinyls many charms. Or you could complain and try another record. When two or three all play the same you will learn. Or if the next one is better you will learn that too.

So much more fun than boring old CDs don't you think?