Agreed.
The collecting really started in '91-2 for me, with my first CD player, and picked up speed at the end of the decade (income!).
I used to go pretty often to the huge music/book/hi-fi & video hardware chainstore, FNAC (which has opened stores in a few other countries since then); it was literally a 5-minute walk from my home, so I could go there anytime, very regularly, and return to see if a title had arrived.
Like Doug said, the only information I had was from movie posters, and I, too, would skip directly to the composer credit-- I still do, as a matter of fact.
No information, which may have made me miss out on some things, though not too many, I think, as the store had a relatively large selection. I missed things by not buying them because I hesitated, I picked something else, I could not afford them yet, I procrastinated, I thought they would be there the next time and sremain in print and such things.
With hardly any information, most everything was a surprise!
The Star Wars Anthology box, for instance, was a huge one! I had passed on the previous releases so far, because I had found them short and had also noticed there were different releases, so I was hoping for something more satisfying-- and I got it!
Silly as it may seem, it's really in the store that I realized that Superman, Jaws, the Star Wars movies, and the Indiana Jones movies, had all been scored by the same guy. My first score ever was the LP of E.T., which I played countless times, so I knew his name; I had also taped the credits music from the above, but somehow, it did not really struck me how much of this guy's music I liked, and how many such great movies he had scored until I actually saw all those CDs.
Silly and childish, isn't it?
You could not sample anything until the latter half of the '90's (the late '90's?), so the purchases were based on what I knew from the movies, the composers I was beginning to be familiar with (starting with Williams & Goldsmith-- the Gremlins LP was my second score ever), taking small chances on their names, adding up the total time (it was expensive for me, so choices had to be made).
One great thing is that you could really discover movies and scores; nowadays, you have to be extremely careful not to see or read spoilers (even in track lists!), but sometimes you just cannot, because a picture pops up somewhere without any warning, or someone spoils a huge surprise without any warning.
With little money to buy CDs, my collection reamined modest for some time, and scores got to be played over and over again.
Returning to some of them now, after not listening to them in a long while (many new CDs plus overfamilarity) is a very refreshing and nostalgic experience.
Incidentally, The Adventures of the Great Mouse Detective is ending right now. I read Doug's & Anakin's messages and started typing this while listening to this CD I had not played in some time.
Playing Jurassic Park brings back fond memories of that time. I had read the articles in Time and Newsweek but they did not tell the whole story; I was eager to listen to the music. It was summer, in the country; it was beautiful. A splendid experience. So was seeing the movie for the first time.
Another such big moment was in the Disney Store on the Champs Elysées; I have no memory what had just been shown on the screen at the other end of the store, but suddenly, a man started-- well, the very time, the very first sound, sounds like yelling; a few words; it sounded African; the images on the screen were sumptuous. It was The Lion King-- it was not even a trailer, but the actual opening sequence. I had never read nor heard anything about the music, and I don't even remember having heard or read much about the movie itself either, and it was a splendid experience.
It's hard to recapture this sort of magic nowadays.
Information is great, but discovering something on your own is even better-- truly discovering it, that is; not trying it because you have heard or read about it, even just the title; really chancing upon something, being able to appreciate it fully without the memory of someone's judgment; not "oh, so that's what they were talking about" and "they were right, it's good", but "wow, I did not know it existed, and it's great", which is exactly what I was able to experience as described above (the Star Wars Anthology set & seeing the "trailer" for The Lion King), but we can no longer experience quite the same way on the Net.
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