I thought you would inquire about bottlecap-collecting.
1- When did you start your soundtracks CD/LP collection, and how old were you ?
My first score LPs, thanks to my mother:
E.T. (1982, I was 8 )
Gremlins & Ghostbusters (1984, 10)
Batman (1989, 15)
My first CDs, with my first CD player (same acknowledgements):
John Williams Conducts John Williams: The Star Wars Symphony and Twin Peaks (1991, 17)
The collection grew modestly until I became a teacher a couple of years later (earning money, even relatively not much, does help collecting).
2- How many original soundtracks CDs and LPs do you own (roughly) ?
Score LPs: 4
Score CDs: 1127-- and very very very few true disappointments (regrets) (probably not even 1%)
3- From which composer do you collect the most ?
Jerry Goldsmith.
4- From which label do you collect the most ?
No idea, and it's not a criterion.
Varèse being the most prolific, I suppose they are the ones I have the most CDs from.
5- What is the rare item you’re the most prouf of ?
Young Sherlock Holmes, I guess.
Also my E.T. and Gremlins LPs.
6- What would you pay for a truly rare item ?
Not too much; 45 euro in July was the most; this was for a mint sealed The Old Man and the Sea (Broughton); it was a good deal for me, but I was sure it was worth it-- and it was.
It surely depends on the item (out of print, several CDs, limited run, signed, ...).
7- How do you classify your soundtracks (label, composer, chronological,…) ?
I have different categories:
- my absolute "Favorite" ones (any composer & genre)
- a few selected "Composer" categories (Goldsmith, Williams, Broughton, Poledouris, Elfman, Horner)
- genre (any composer, thus including the above) (western, action/adventure, sea, Star Wars, Star Trek, Bond, War, ...).
Besides the mere visual satisfaction of color uniformity, I don't see the point of label / spine color classification. Sure, it looks nice; but when I want to play something, I want to listen to a western score, or quiet music, or action music, or something atmospheric, ...-- never to a score "by such label" or "whose spine is such color".
8- What is the most beautiful item of your collection (cover art, booklet, picture disc, boxset) ?
The Goldsmith & Bernstein sets.
The leatherette editions of the TLotR scores are very nice.
The Star Wars Anthology box (great book).
The Music of Disney-- A Legacy in Song (superb book & box).
9- Which of your items has the most incredible sound ?
I have no idea. I most certainly have noticed splendid sound on several CDs, but I could not list them.
10- What do you think of mp3 ? Do you think it’s gonna end the collecting pleasure ?
Music ought to be released on CD and/or as uncompressed audio files-- no compressed format, whether mp3 or other.
CDs are easier (everyone does not have the equipment nor knowledge to download files) to get and safer (scratch one CD, it's just one CD; crash a hard rive, you love everything).
The only advantage of electronic storage is saving room have having (nearly) everything on hand-- plus backup.
I have made backups of rare CDs, and intend to do so for all the rare ones I have (rare as in out of print, limited, ...). Actually, I am currently doing just that, as I got a new external hard drive yesterday (Iomega, 500Gb-- ie, 465Gb actual capacity).
Since buying my laptop a few years ago, I have also been copying tracks or whole CDs as mp3s onto its hard drive, so that I can play them anywhere or, when at home, without having to search for something (I also like using my laptop in bed, so it's very handy).
|