Can you Listen to Vinyl Casually??


Me, if I spin my vinyl and try to do work around the house or whatever, I am envariably drawn to sit down and listen to the music. Just can't help myself.

With CD or radio - I could care less and do other activities all day.

Anyone else experience this strange behaviour of vinyl addiction ??

cheers
downunder
How about "if your digital rig sounds equal or better than your analog rig then your turntable isn't setup correctly!"

I do have to say that my Lector 7 CD player is the most analogue sounding CD player I have heard. It has it's moments where it draws me in like vinyl but at the end of the day it can't even come close. It's just there for those recordings I can't get on LP.
Downunder...Sorry but that doesn't work. I live in a 200+ year old house in rural New England. To make things worse, at this time of year pollen is heavy in the air.

I never have a problem with CDs or DVDs. To my great surprise I even used a CD player in the room where I was doing a huge carpentry project, with sawdust level so high that it was hard to breathe, and no problem.

In my "real" system, which lives in a slightly better environment, I never, repeat never, have a problem with CDs. This for several decades of use. I never clean CDs (if it ain't broke don't fix it) although I do handle them with the same care as LPs so there are no fingerprints on them. So many people report problems with CDs that I really suspect that frequent cleaning may actually cause the problem. I know this is true of Lab optical devices, which you never clean except for brushing away any dust with a soft brush, and that every couple of years.
I have the same problem and I agree with Seasoned; vinyl is more involving. I have spent a ton of money on digital and it just doesn't stack-up (stack-up, records, get it?).

I have gotten close like Nrostrov, but at the end of the day CD's are for records that have seed burns on them. Damn my miss-spent youth!
I'd say my CD and analog rigs are pretty comparable in quality: I have a Sony SC-2000 ES 5-disc CD/SACD changer (which was a huge improvement over a same-priced CEC from a few years before), and my TT is a Technics SL1210 M5G with KAB fluid damper and Denon DL-160.

I often spin vinyl when I'm puttering around the house--cooking, doing dishes, picking up things, etc. So often, when I'm in the kitchen cooking or cleaning, I HAVE to put aside the dish towel to sit in the sweet spot to hear it all. This was even true when my entire rig was worth about $570--before the DL-160 and fluid damper. Now the music *compels* me to come in and sit down.

I find it hardest to resist when it's a minimally mic'd recording that presents a true sonic hologram of the musicians and the venue. Recordings that come to mind include a Columbia Masterworks of Stokowski conducting the Bizet Carmen and L'Arlesienne suites, small jazz combos recorded live in real space, and some Living Stereo and Living Presence orchestral recordings.

The thing is, even with studio recordings of pop music, I come in and listen when I can. But if I stay in the other room and work, the music *still* gets under my skin and haunts me for hours and even days afterwards. A couple recent examples are "Moondance" by Van Morrison and "Catch Bull at Four" by the artist formerly known as Cat Stevens.

I played those LPs recently while I was in other rooms working, but still, those great songs and arrangements go around in my head in a way that digitally sourced music never did (and I have both Moondance and Van Morrison's Greatest Hits on CD)--not in 20 years of exclusively digitally-sourced music.