There are many wonderful things about this digital age (yelp, for example), but for me, there are some experiences that are just richer, more rewarding - better, in fact, when experienced in analogue form. My boyfriend has just bought a kindle for his reading pleasure - while I can see the advantages of having thousands of volumes in one slim device, I also found the reading experience somewhat lacking. The hard plastic was uncomfortable to hold and the black flash of the screen refreshing was very disruptive, preventing me from the delight of losing myself in the story as I would with a humble paperback.
Music is the same - I have thousands of MP3 files, but while I love running with my iPod, I never feel so connected to the music as I do when I drop the needle on a record and hear the warm crackle, unique to whatever particular copy I am listening to, and watch the spinning disc release its pleasures in its own sweet time. Buying vinyl is one thing that I've never found satisfactory online, just because it's so easy to bend a sleeve or shatter a disc, and the best packaging in the world is no match for our postman, who brings a certain cheerful violence to all his deliveries. Charity shops often have a treasure trove of recordings, but these are often of variable quality, sometimes scratched beyond use.
My favourite kind of place for buying records is the specialist second hand store, of which D'Vinyl is one of the finest in Cardiff. Piles of vinyl (and CDs, DVDs and books) are packed into the shop, all lovingly bagged and graded and available at very reasonable prices.
Aside from affording me a welcome opportunity to pretend to be an extra in High Fidelity, it also offers friendly and knowledgeable staff (not that much like High Fidelity, then), who will also buy your unwanted music from you - and if you sell it here, you can at least rest assured that it's likely to go to a good home. read more