I'm torn. CD-era releases I'm okay with owning only on CD, e.g., Ride, Pixies, Nirvana, even Sonic Youth, to an extent, although I have replaced many of those things with an LP copy over the years. I am adamant about owning vinyl only for anything pre-1987 or so, anything that more than likely was issued originally on LP or intended only for LP-issue.
No kidding. No spam!
^ the big change in the early 90s, that was very important in the rise of 'multi-artist' cd compilations was the arrival of audio software ( OSC's Deck and Sound Tools Session ) that didn't require expensive external hardware to produce a 'Red Book standard' cd master file.
Before '91 the cost of producing a cd master at a pro studio was about £1000 per hour ( with 'industry standard' being 60 mins of audio required about 4 hours of 'work' so about £4000 per cd was considered a good price ).
After '91 lots of small start-ups began offering cd mastering options for £500 for the whole a cd.
When it came to individual artist compilations the arrival as a concept of 'The Best of...' albums offering 'x number' of new tracks alongside past hits, over the classic 'Greatest Hits' albums of an artists past singles, was a major 'sea change' at all the major labels ( and a major boon for the artist as unlike 'greatest hits comps' they counted towards their publishing and recording deals so $$$$$ all round).
hep, the 'bandcamp' sales format is probably the most interesting route forward.
Uses the idea of a 'congruent physical and digital' sales format in a clever way and then combines it with a streaming/cloud option to boot.
More money to the artist too.
Music doesn't appear to be at the forefront popular culture anymore that certainly wasnt the case until id say up to about 5 years ago
/\ mama, ain't no denyin' ... no denyin' .....