試す 金 - 無料
An ultrasonic bargain
Stereophile
|March 2025
The first album I ever bought with my own money-cash earned mowing neighbors' lawns-was a British plum-label pressing of Led Zeppelin II.
It was 1971. I rode my prized Raleigh Chopper bike from our home on the coast of Denmark down the road a couple of miles to the local record store in a small town called Hørsholm.
Fifty-four years ago, this kind of unsupervised activity was considered pretty normal for a 9-year-old kid in Denmark, even with no cellphones or other tethers that allowed your parents to keep tabs on you. It was also a time when smaller record stores would let you listen to records over headphones before buying them. A few days earlier, I had heard a few tantalizing snippets from LZ-2 courtesy of a friend's older brother; I knew instantly that I needed to hear more.
After entering the store and browsing for a few minutes, I mustered up sufficient courage to head to the counter with the Zeppelin and ask to listen to it. All was musical bliss for a few minutes. Then just as I was really getting into it, about halfway through What Is and What Should Never Be, the clerk decided I'd heard enough and rudely interrupted my listening session with a "get lost kid" look on his face. I surprised him by pulling out my lawn-mowing cash and buying the album. I pedaled home furiously, as fast as I could, and slapped my first LP onto the family Garrard Autoslim, which I wrote about in Spin Doctor #11.¹
Already at age 9, I was a budding audiophile. I constantly cleaned and cared for my new treasure, using a brush and a clear cylindrical plastic bottle of blue record cleaner fluid I got from somewhere. As I cleaned, I got a few whiffs of that freshsmelling blue cleaning fluid, which was probably about a quarter pure alcohol and was likely giving my 9-year-old kid brain a bit of a buzz. Fifty-four years later, I still own that record, but when I play it today, it kind of sounds like I'm listening through a bowl of Rice Krispies. So much for 9-yearold kids and their record-care skills.
このストーリーは、Stereophile の March 2025 版からのものです。
Magzter GOLD を購読すると、厳選された何千ものプレミアム記事や、10,000 以上の雑誌や新聞にアクセスできます。
すでに購読者ですか? サインイン
Stereophile からのその他のストーリー
Stereophile
T. REX- Electric Warrior
Once Marc Bolan uttered the famous line \"You're dirty sweet and you're my girl\" (from \"Get It On (Bang a Gong)\"), it was clear that Electric Warrior had transformed the former Tolkien-enthralled folkie into a luminous star.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
DAVE ADEWUMI- The Flame Beneath the Silence
As a generalization, jazz people are abnormally in need of the new. That's why they gravitate to the art form that offers both improvisation (which is forever new by definition) and continuous experimentation.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
JONAS KAUFMANN- Magische Töne
In his third delight-filled foray into operetta, tenor Jonas Kaufmann continues his journey from Berlin and Vienna to Hungary, the birthplace of Franz (Ferenc) Lehár and Emmerich (Imre) Kálmán.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
RACHMANINOFF: The Bells; Symphonic Dances
These two scores, like the symphonies, allow us to appreciate Rachmaninoff's more venturesome idiom-beyond the straightforward framework he uses in the popular concerti.
1 min
July 2026
Stereophile
BEN STAPP- Uzmic Ro'Samg (Live Solo Tuba)
As I was previewing Ben Stapp's Uzmic Ro'Samg, my thoughts drifted to Jim Self, who passed away 10 days after the album's release.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
LOST NIGHTS, FOUND SOLOS
THE PENTHOUSE TAPES PRESERVE A SLICE OF SEATTLE JAZZ HISTORY
7 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
KING TUFF- Moo
Over more than two decades, Kyle Thomas has crafted an unpolished strain of rock under the name King Tuff. His music has always felt raw, channeling the spirit of Thin Lizzy but with less concern for hitmaking.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
HOLST: The Planets; BAX: Tintagel
This is The Planets' second go-round on LSO Live, which, decades ago, brought us one conducted by Sir Colin Davis. I'd forgotten this label has been around as long as that!
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
SNAIL MAIL- Ricochet
\"Tractor Beam,\" the lush and expansive opening track on Ricochet, wastes no time reaching altitude. Its confident introduction draws listeners in.
1 mins
July 2026
Stereophile
Building a music ecosystem in Birmingham
Hifi listening bars have expanded far beyond Tokyo, which was their Ground Zero.
3 mins
July 2026
Listen
Translate
Change font size
