The only one I own and regularly listen to (although, iirc, I do have a random bootleg/silver CD of some Dark Side gig somewhere, picked up at Greenwich market in London decades ago)
https://www.discogs.com/release/3688...nd-The-Journey
This is the only Floyd bootleg I actively sought out on vinyl - I had the roio files shared online around 2000/2001 but I'm a bit of a vinyl purist when it comes to music and it's the only physical media I have ever really bought - since I started buying music and checking out record shops in the early 1990s. I do have a fair few CDs gathering dust in a box, but it's just bits and pieces to me - and I don't even have a CD player wired up to my stereo at the moment (I should probably do something about that!)
But the Man and the Journey is, if you have your main albums and things on vinyl, for me at least, downright essential. It's the missing album that should have been released in the official catalogue. Although, if I'm not mistaken, it has been released officially in the Early Years box?
Beyond that, where's the harm if there's a particular gig you like and you'd listen to it on vinyl? You're not hurting anyone. Chances are, if you own 5 or 10 legitimate Floyd albums on CD or vinyl (heck, even streaming) then you've already given the Floyd more than the average person has. If you own 20, 30, 40, etc... albums - you are well beyond the average person. In fact, if we remove all these die-hard and even casual collectors, and it was just the 'average guy' buying the odd Floyd album then they (the Floyd) would be very much poorer. They'd still be filthy rich, of course, but quite a shade less filthy.
Don't think twice, it's alright, so sayeth Dylan
https://www.discogs.com/release/3688...nd-The-Journey
This is the only Floyd bootleg I actively sought out on vinyl - I had the roio files shared online around 2000/2001 but I'm a bit of a vinyl purist when it comes to music and it's the only physical media I have ever really bought - since I started buying music and checking out record shops in the early 1990s. I do have a fair few CDs gathering dust in a box, but it's just bits and pieces to me - and I don't even have a CD player wired up to my stereo at the moment (I should probably do something about that!)
But the Man and the Journey is, if you have your main albums and things on vinyl, for me at least, downright essential. It's the missing album that should have been released in the official catalogue. Although, if I'm not mistaken, it has been released officially in the Early Years box?
Beyond that, where's the harm if there's a particular gig you like and you'd listen to it on vinyl? You're not hurting anyone. Chances are, if you own 5 or 10 legitimate Floyd albums on CD or vinyl (heck, even streaming) then you've already given the Floyd more than the average person has. If you own 20, 30, 40, etc... albums - you are well beyond the average person. In fact, if we remove all these die-hard and even casual collectors, and it was just the 'average guy' buying the odd Floyd album then they (the Floyd) would be very much poorer. They'd still be filthy rich, of course, but quite a shade less filthy.
Don't think twice, it's alright, so sayeth Dylan
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