David Harbin: >Can I ask: do you think that someone can become addicted to buying >classical CDs? Sure. >Do you get a rush of adrenalin when you savour the thought of that next >purchase? Yes. >Has your collection grown so large that you couldn't possibly >listen to half of it again in a month? Long, long ago. But if I could play it all in two months I'd be concerned about getting sated with the very special pieces I'd limited my collection to. Preventing that is a good reason for having enough music available for the peaks and valleys of enjoyment, when possible. >Do you feel just a tiny bit embarrassed, wondering where all of the money >has gone, when you take a guilty glance at those piles of CD cases? If they were purchased with an adequate amount of discretionary income for recreation and the arts, last indefinitely, yield intense satisfaction when played (or even sit available for use), and provide income for musicians and others in the music business (which seems so much more worthwhile than other lines of work I won't mention) then whence the guilt or embarrassment? Of course if you have a really BIG habit that puts you in debt, takes food from the hungry (now there's a guilt-ridden consideration), etc., then that's another matter. Best to think oneself a minor patron of the arts if spending on recordings becomes significant. Very many of them would never see the light of day if some people were not avid collectors. But don't let me encourage any personal irresponsibility. >Do you think that the process of purchasing and buying the CD has >overtaken the enjoyment of the music itself? No. I just wish there were more time for listening. Jim Tobin