Vetinari wrote:From that description 2/3 of them are actually audiophile copies, with the 1/3 being uncertain. The 2 "audiophile" LPs are virgin vinyl, from "original master tapes" with "hand-mixed" coloured-vinyl blah blah blah... all paraphrased from "Music On Vinyl" - the manufacturer.
From the information on the Music on Vinyl site, it sounds like they do everything except half speed mastering. I'm still a little dubious about the durability/quality of colored vinyls, but I'm no chemist. I just have to go by what I've read.
I've no idea about the other LP, but from the timing of the release it's made from the same tapes as the near identical black LP release from the same period, probably at the same factory (actually they're all almost certainly the same factory, since these were UK releases and last I heard there's only 1 LP factory extant).
Those kind of sound like "collector's" pressings. I've got a couple of picture discs like that.
Can you reuse transparent vinyl like that without it being obvious?
Recycled into regular vinyl? Probably.
(Actually from a slightly snobbish review of one of the discs the mix on one of the LPs is an improvement on the original CD release at the very least...)
If it was a Music on Vinyl pressing that's understandable. They say they re-cut a lacquer master and then repress. That would give them a chance to "fix" any perceived short comings of the regular release.
I guess you could treat these vinyls like a fine vintage wine. You can keep them in storage, hanging on to them for their collector's value. Or you could sit down and have yourself one orgasmic audio experience. While they will still sound great for many playings, there will only be one "first" playing.