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1) The majority of listening by the public as a whole has always been background music. Lately is has just been more compressed stuff through earphones than a budget system in the next room. Bottom line - this is nothing new, not in the last 40 years.
Today (and since the CD was introduced), turning on music is far too easy...and as such, there is no "labor of love" to get it turned on...
2: There is no point in bringing out new state-of-the-art digital gear. A $79.00CD or DVD player from Walmart will give you about 80% of the audio quality of a $4000DAC.
First of all a distinction needs to be made between critical listening in attempt to find flaws in the reproduction of music by your system and taking an hour of time to listen to a complete symphony or an entire CD of music without distractions or multitasking. I think fewer and fewer people find the time or make the time to listen to music as an end in and of itself. As far as reproduction quality is concerned I agree with the 80% figure. The neat thing is it is possible to closely approach state of the art Redbook and DVD-A reproduction with a modified Cobyor JVC DVD player. The key to this lies in the brand and model of the DAC used in the player and whether there is room to retrofit a clock along with shunt regulation and a buffered output stage into the player. The Wolfson and AKM DACs have excellent inherent jitter rejection as well as an output stage that has voltage out without a POS built-in OP-AMP to handicap it's performance.It is possible to buy a non-fatiguing DVD player to listen to CDs for as little as $40. This level of performance cost in the thousands of dollars only a few years ago. Scotty
Which leads me to another point:There are those that say the following:All amps sound the same.Buy a cheap DVD player for $40.00 and it sounds great.Use zip cord for speaker cable and a coat hanger for interconnects and they sound justas good as anything.If that is conceivably true, then one could buy a state-of-the-art system for about $100.00, buy a good pair of speakers for a couple of hundred more and there you go.End of hobby.Anybody have a comment?
imho the "labor of love" of getting into music has nothing to do with hifi. It is going to the stinky ass clubs and working up a sweat....