0 Members and 1 Guest are viewing this topic. Read 5183 times.
Here's a funny thought. Do you remember when you were off to college trying to fit your speakers, receiver, turntable, records, etc. into the car and then working with your roommate to set it up in your small dorm room?Todays college kids only need their smartphone, a subscription to a streaming service and some earbuds. The real "Audiophile" in the dorm probably has a single Bluetooth speaker on their desktop, or at best a pair of 5" speakers plugged into their laptop.
$27K is "flagship" level of tower speakers from a handful of quality brands.At the end of the day, those are just overpriced bookshelf speakers.
You can have a great sounding system using inexpensive gear from Schiit audio.
Who makes these absurd prices seem fair is the audio press.TV market offer great options with excellent image at low prices.The prob is only in the audio market.
You're comparing apples and oranges. TVs and other mass market electronics have a tremendous pricing advantage because of economy of scale in manufacturing efficiency. Audio products with stratospheric pricing are built by small operations with no economy of scale. To say stratospherically priced products are unique to audio is also untrue. Almost anything marketed to the extreme top of the economic elite is similarly priced. Designer furniture, contemporary Fine Art, watches, bespoke designer clothing, automobiles, yachts, etc. all have products similarly priced. Stratospherically priced consumer goods are nothing but a reflection of the extreme divergence of economic fortunes in today's world. We're in a world economy that increasingly looks like the extreme economic wealth concentration seen during the "gilded age" of 1870/90.
Yes its TV and hi-fi audio. There are many justifications, all seems logical and coherent.However these prices are killing the audio market, we are the last generation of audiophiles, after us, no millennial will accept these prices, I can see them laughing at these five figure values.They don't have the knowledge to set up a coherent system, and probably don't will have the money to do so, they will just buy a cell phone, no cd, no dvd, just a phone to streaming free MP3 or web radio also free. Wish good luck to these US manufactures.
However these prices are killing the audio market, we are the last generation of audiophiles, after us, no millennial will accept these prices, I can see them laughing at these five figure values.
I'm a little confused by some of this discussion. "Are high end audio prices out of control?" Compared to what? There were ridiculously expensive audio components available in 2004. Certainly not as many as today but since 2004 there has been an explosion of wealth around the world fueled by globalization. Most of that wealth has been accumulated by a fairly small percentage (10%?) at the very top. Capitalism is filling void. You may have noticed new houses continue to get larger, and therefore more expensive and more profitable for builders. People around the world are buying enormous cars that only get 12-16 mpg and cost upward of $100,000 (GMC Yukon) which like bigger houses, make more profit for corporations. I couldn't afford MBL speakers and amplifiers in 2004 anymore than I can afford them today. I didn't/dont see anything wrong with that. Nothing has changed except for the number of high end vendors trying to get a piece of the action.
FRM has a valid point. As audiophiles get older (i.e., over 65), does our consumption of audio gear increase or decrease?We don't have to wait for the next generation to predict the future of high-end audio. How many of us slowed down on purchasing audio gear in the past few years due to escalating prices? I don't plan to make any significant purchases in the foreseeable future, and that's a first for me in 25 years.