Buying new vinyl?


Hi,
I know this touch has been discussed for some tome, bit the situation might have changed and I'm just getting into vinyl as I can't stand digital anymore. I thought it was just a matter of getting a good dac but I changed my mind when I tried one. It still sounded digital.

I see that new vinyl is being sold but some claim that Waxtime for instance is simply producing vinyl from CD's. Has the situation changed? Are there any places online to buy vinyl produced from the old analogue masters?
fabsound
The OP posed a situation where he can't stand to listen to digital anymore,
and asked this ANALOG FORUM how to avoid digitally-sourced LPs. In
swoops Scvan with his condescending, dogmatic doggerel about album
covers, familiarity with the sound of an inferior medium, yadda-yadda-yadda,
as though faith in measured numbers is supposed to trump the ear-brain
connection and how we respond emotionally to one medium vs. another.

Hey genius, we tried digital for years, 20 years in my case, and 20 years later
we still found it lacking. You're not going to convert us and most of us who
joined this thread are helping the OP find analog-sourced LPs. Hijacking a
thread to push your agenda is rude, and could be construed as trolling.
I think there's a great community spirit in the audiogon forums, and it's fantastic so many are willing to share their experience. It's great of some like digital. I enjoy it sometimes. The 10 best-sounding CDs in my collection sound really good to me. But my ears have started to recognize the limitations of digital, and I think we have been programmed by the industry to believe that digital is modern (more precise, cleaner, lossless, convinient for modern lifestyles, etc.). Long story short, I have simply fallen for vinyl and tubes from a purely sonic experience. My local dealer says digital can create the same feeling, but that it costs ten times as much. I listened to a 20k dac and was not convinced
If you like classic rock, punk rock, new wave, etc..70s-early 80s were a great era for vinyl...for the most part...plentiful and cheap...I'm not a big new or reissue guy...but for those that don't reside in a major city and rely on mail order, or for those that simply want a new product, some great options...Sundazed, mofi, etc.
Buy old pressings. There is a sweet spot before too much electronic gimmickry in the studio (and in the instruments themselves unless you are listening to electronic music) created an unnatural glaze. Many of these older pressings sound far more visceral than the "audiophile" re-do's. You have to do your due diligence but the cost of your time and effort will be rewarded and many of these records can be had cheaply if you know what to look for and have the ability to effectively clean the records.
PS: a lot of the audiophile remasters -not all- sound brighter and less of a piece than the original pressings. Whether that is a function of modern taste, the desire for more "detail" at the expense of cohesiveness or compensation for tape aging or other source-related issues, I don't know. But don't assume a fancy recut betters a prosaic original or early press.