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Muzik uber alles!I had to distance myself from the ultra-high end crowd because it became a gear and money game. That type of thing forced many people to lose focus and constantly swap gear and never be satisfied. I have to concentrate on music, because often those expensive changes end up as yet another set of sonic compromises, and that begats more change. Horns! No wait...stats! No wait dynamics! No wait-fullrange! no wait...planar!...no wait...horns.... and so on. Same for components. Tube! SS! Digital! Set! Pushpull! etc...This hobby can be a vast, endless money pit. Or it can be absorbing oneself into music. I choose the latter to preserve enjoyment and sanity.
Greetings everyone. Here's a biggie: When you sit down for a session with your hi-fi, what do you find that you are really listening to most 1) the music, or 2) your components? Where and what is that mysterious, illusive, fine line between 1) simply and wonderfully enjoying the music and.... 2) listening critically for either how "great" your system sounds (such as trying to justify upgrades, tweaks, tube rolling, wire changes, etc.) or listening for all of the flaws and weaknesses of your gear. When does the tweaking stop and the enjoyment begin? Conversely, when is it time to improve and upgrade because, in reality, you would be happier if your system sounded better?
This is the audiophile dilemma. Your love of music, and the fun of your hobby, sets you on a journey to create a system that will connect you directly to the emotion of the music. Eventually you get there and you are in seventh heaven. For awhile. Then you begin, in spite of yourself, to listen for the flaws. Soon you make changes that move you toward higher resolution. How many of our reviews begin with, "I'm hearing things I never heard before!". Then, without meaning to, you cross a threshold and find you have "refined" your system to the point where half your records (CD's, files, etc.) are unlistenable. So you start over in frustration (this is often the point where you sell everything and buy a used, mellow sounding, British integrated amp). An old audio sales guy once warned me about upgrades, saying, "You open the window wider, you let in more dirt". Wes Phillips, a good reviewer, says the hardest thing for an audiophile is to know when to quit.I think the luckiest people of all are those friends and neighbors of yours you guided into great sounding systems. They never upgrade because they have no interest in doing so and every time you see them they thank you again for turning them on to such marvelous sound. The unluckiest are those audiophiles who are so neurotic that, for them, music is the ultimate distortion they have to put up with in order to listen to their gear.
It is a journey. Folks really need to start with speakers,not gear. Too much self doubt and impulse choices influenced by others.
This hobby has two parts: music, and stuff.For those who do not care about the stuff, a boombox works.. or a MP3 player.For those who do not care about the music, many other hobbies have stuff and no music..The combination is what is this hobby's special thing.I love music, I like fiddling around with stuff. perfect.