Is Music dying?

Kenwood made some great tuners. The last tuner I had in my main system was a Kenwood KT-3300d a FM only tuner. At one time I owned the entire 3300d series, integrated and CDP. I believe the KA-3300 was the first integrated amp to have a built-in DAC. At the time the idea didn't seem to take off, look at it now.

All snobs aside, Kenwood made some really good gear. Accuphase was started with ex-Kenwood engineers.
 
Interesting, part of my issue may be Tidal. I knew a new Lamb of God album was released today, it didn't show on the new releases or even under Metal, I did find it when I searched their name. I may have to find a backup new release list. Or consider a new service.
 
I listen to the car radio all of the time. Especially when you're close to the transmitter, the sound is fantastic.

Mostly public radio, and not only because I love jazz and classical music. My favorites are those funded by listeners and donors, without no NPR involvement. College stations are pretty easy to find when on a road trip, the downside being that most of them have a relatively small coverage area. But they're one of my favorite new music discovery tools, for sure.

I play albums that I have downloaded from Qobuz to my phone for the stretches with no signal. I'm planning a road trip out west this summer, and I think I have about 30 albums loaded up so far.

When I was working, AM news radio was indispensable for news, traffic and weather updates.
 
Interesting, part of my issue may be Tidal. I knew a new Lamb of God album was released today, it didn't show on the new releases or even under Metal, I did find it when I searched their name. I may have to find a backup new release list. Or consider a new service.

Qobuz is the bomb for me. I kicked Tidal to the curb after having both Tidal andcQobuz simultaneously for an extended time and picking the clear winner for me.
 
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