I have to agree with everyone that at least for me there is something special about having a physical copy of the music in hand whether that be vinyl or a CD. I hate it when someone releases only on iTunes and I'll never do Spotify.
It's not the entire younger generation, however who is into instant gratification commercial crap listened to on ear buds. My son, a carpenter/musician, still has my old Thorens turntable with a 19 lb platter and JBL L100 speakers which I gifted him when he went to college (they also got me through college in the 70s). His idea of a great Saturday afternoon is to go to the Electric Fetus, an old time record shop in Minneapolis, and spend 2-3 hours looking through the used record bins for treasures that others have discarded. He's picked up a myriad a classic albums ranging from original Dylan, Dead, and Quicksilver vinyl to a whole series of recordings from the library or Congress and the National Recording Archives of some of the original blues greats including Lighting Hopkins, Robert Johnson, the Rev. Gary Davis, Leadbelly, Mississippi John Hurt, etc.
And yes, I also listen to entire CDs and albums in the order in which the artist intended and have always hated playlists and the random play functions of personal players,
What I miss the most is unpeeling the plastic covering of a new album, putting it on the turntable and then sitting with friends, listening to it the first time together (not through earbuds but through speakers we could all hear together) and then talking about what we had just heard. Today, if your at a music listening session with friends, everyone's plugged into their own MP3 players and no one is talking to each other (they might be texting but I'd nevertheless know).