I have been intrigued by the 45 RPM LPs that are available today, though I do not understand what the advantage of a 45 has over a 33 1/3 is. Maybe someone can enlighten me?
When I first saw the price of vinyl going at today's prices I was somewhat taken aback. But, I can remember LPs listing for $12.99 in the late 60's and early 70's. In today's dollars that would be almost $80, likewise the $12.99 LP "today" would have only cost around $2 back then--cut out prices back then. The quality today is far superior, especially if one uses vinyl from the mid 70's when the gas embargo was going on as the baseline. I have read that most of the LPs produced during that period used recycled vinyl. I know I had a lot of LPs go bad on me from that era. EMI is one notable exception, as are a few of the European presses (if you can find them). My wife actually hit a gold mine of beautiful LPs at the local Goodwill. A boatload of 60's jazz, European pressings (Cat Stevens, Beach Boys, Beatles (yes, I was shocked)). She paid $1 to $2 per and the quality is of each LP is pristine. In the end, our LP library increased by about 50.
Would love to read/hear about the 45 RPM vs 33 1/3 RPM.