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What's odd is that I've had albums like that with many recommendations that did nothing for me when I listened to them. But after a few decades went by, I'd put one on the turntable out of curiosity and find I like it quite a bit. Or, sometimes it's by an artist I've collected and used the record to fill in a hole in the collection, never appreciating it until many years later.Then there are the ones that I was urged to listen to and they went nowhere in my humble estimation.
Best plan of attack! The few times I've gotten rid of something, I always found later on that I wish I had kept it.Yeah, I'm hanging onto what I've got, just in case the mood strikes me.
Same here My friend it took so long and a lot of money investing in what I have now and if I were to ditch anything in my collection it wouldn't be the same I made that mistake a few times and I regretted itYeah, I'm hanging onto what I've got, just in case the mood strikes me.
That's why we all need our 30x50 man cave pole barns out back.Although, since our house has a couple of stairways in it (split level design from the late '70s), we may wind up having to move to a one-floor arrangement at some point, and my better half may force me to downsize!
I kind of grew into URGH! A Music War the same way. I admit I mainly wanted it for the live Police track. But I think a few times I played it, I was doing other tasks and didn't get around to stopping the record, so I heard a similar spark in one of the songs and kept playing it the record, and it grew on me to where I'd play the whole thing.I know when I first got into I.R.S. The Buzzcocks were a hard "no" but then I started to hear something that appealed to me, maybe riff or an interesting lyric so a few plays later I found my self listening to them on repeat.