Deluxe anniversary edition

>deluxe anniversary edition
>adds demos and live versions to the vinyl

>Those ugly Deluxe title cards that ruin the cover

>album is 34 minutes long
>deluxe anniversary version makes it over 2 hours long

>haven't heared the album before
>have to google when to stop it so I don't hear the added tracks

>deluxe edition
>even better than the original and has a better closing track.

>>Deluxe Anniversary Edition
>>Adds half a dozen songs
>>Not covers or live versions or demos
>>But somehow still all complete garbage

This

>Just bought Snoop Dogg's Doggystyle on vinyl
>1/2" black stripe that runs across the bottom that days "Digitally Remastered"

>early unused mix is better than the final album

yeah fuck them for providing additional content

>Not having the taste to realise that sometimes less is more

pleb. All "bonus" tracks should ALWAYS be isolated on their own side/sides on vinyl, or their own disc on CD.

but I wanna experience a record the way it was originally intended

>version without fascination or the string version of It's Gonna Be Me
>Better.

Fucking rockists

Yeah but on vinyl it's different. You can cue up songs individually if you want, but the very nature of vinyl is album-based, and tacking on bonus tracks and demos and whatever other tidbits onto a record, and breaks the natural end of the record.

Imagine if at the end of Raiders of the Lost Ark, they cut to four deleted scenes, six outtakes, and then the credits.

bye rddit

>180G Vinyl Audiophile Edition

>Album reissue has unremovable tag that shows the "added bonuses"

If anyone in this thread is talking about the massive reissues of Pavement

You can PISS OFF

i have this problem all the time

>the shitty cockrock version of Here that replaced the original on Slanted and Enchanted

There are 3 versions of Here on that. You act like the entire original track listing isn't there.
It makes no sense.

It wasn't on the rip I got of the remaster

those were all great

The actual remaster has the entire original remastered track set, then b-sides and alternatives, and then live versions.
It's superior in every way to the original.

>buying digitally remastered vinyl
What on earth is the point

I've witnessed this claim before and I just don't get it.

As if somehow electronic sound and digital production can't be experienced in an analog medium?

You really might as well save yourself the money and get the CD though seeing as they are from the same master

>deluxe edition
>the mastering is utter shit

Every time.

>european exclusive mastering

Could somebody give me the quick rundown on this guy

>exclusive japanese bonus tracks

I do it for the authentic experience. I don't like listening on headphones or actually dealing with digital medium

Records are cool and all man but c'mon.