I don't know much about the market forces or politics behind reissues and vinyl (no more than any old fool who reads Pitchfork and Stereogum, anyway) but I know what I love and what I think is too much.
What I love:
An album I love, or an album I've always wanted to get into, is reissued. The reissue spares no expense. It's on 180g vinyl and CD, with an extra disc of shit or more in either case, it's been lovingly remastered, the packaging is superb (gatefold, maybe with new artwork), cool booklet with lyrics, an essay or two, recording history, etc. The definitive reissues to my mind are the Universal Deluxe Editions and Legacy Editions. The discogs of The Who, Bob Marley, The Moody Blues, T. Rex, Jeff Buckley, etc., all appear in this series and they are pretty much the tits. $30 or less. $10 used
http://rateyourmusic.com/list/CampFredd ... s_edition/
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category: ... e_Editions
What I Don't Love:
1. When an album I love is reissued in the above manner, but costs over $100. Best example would be the 2014 Led Zeppelin Super Deluxe reissues. Gorgeous, archival quality releases, with a prohibitive price tag for anyone who isn't a blues lawyer pushing sixty years old. To put this in perspective, to buy all nine Zep albums in this format, it would be over $1000. I already own Zep's albums in the 1980s jewel case CDs, the 2003 vinyl replica CDs, and on vinyl. I've probably already spent $1000 on Zep releases and merch since the age of 15 or 16. So I love ya, J-Page, but fuck you. It's highway robbery.
2. Record Store Day. Fuck this shit. It pushes indie bands' vinyl releases way back on the docket. Why? So you have the privilege of owning a 7" of a band's new single that's gonna be out on their new album in a month anyway, with some jacked-off cover of some better band's song as a b-side. They're promoting their record and you're paying a premium for it. It used to be good but has become completely choked with bullshit major-label, dad-rock releases. Pass. The last good RSD release was The Flaming Lips' Heady Nuggs and that was years ago, and even it's overpriced.
3. Third Man Records deluxe editions "worth" hundreds of dollars. FYI, Jack White, this doesn't stop flippers. It allows them to justify an even higher eBay markup.
That's a start I guess