ext_281244 (
freakytigger.livejournal.com) wrote in
poptimists2007-07-25 02:33 pm
Box Set Go
This is a question for those of you who buy (or yes ACQUIRE) large amounts of music at once - maybe in the form of a box set, or some kind of big "torrent", or something. I'm especially thinking of things like 4CD sets of country songs, or 8CD Disky box sets - anything with a huge number of not-known-to-you tracks.
My question is - how do you deal with them? Do you have a method for working out what the good stuff is? Do you just listen to them as you would single-artist albums? Do you find that the first five tracks get listened to more than the last five? etc etc.
My question is - how do you deal with them? Do you have a method for working out what the good stuff is? Do you just listen to them as you would single-artist albums? Do you find that the first five tracks get listened to more than the last five? etc etc.
boom boom!
Re: boom boom!
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(My method being - rip everything and hit shuffle).
But are there any better science methods for identifying these good records? Especially in single-genre comps where with the best will in the world things start to get a bit samey one disc in let alone four - I am too much of a style magpie I think.
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A somewhat more cumbersome variant of this I've played with for eg Disky 8cd boxes: rip everything, tag every track with correct year (this is the cumbersome part), line up everything from eg 1973 and hit shuffle.
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One sit-through is usually almost foolproof, and if I dig the whole comp, then I'll just pretend it's an album, so you get interesting favorites.
answer to "is there any better method" question: no
also, for big comps like the one you describe, i will actually consciously play ONLY those things i don't know/remember. the better stuff seems to jump out more quickly that way.
in principle, though, i try to listen one disk at a time (usually that's about my attention span) rather than go through the whole collection at once (i remember very deliberately doing this when i got the james brown box set a few years ago).
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but i don't have that much room on my ipod (history of bebop set), or that much dedication (punk-into-postpunk set), so not every box set gets this treatment.
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I have found the larger ones tend not to get played again very often. I am thinking I should stop buying them unless I am absolutely convinced I will want to listen lots of times.
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Commitment
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If it's more of a collection than an aggregate of complete albums, I'll play 'em all in shuffle thereon.