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Quote from: bprice2 on 28 Feb 2007, 06:41 pmIts hard to drive without a car.I know a lot of people who love music but don't have an audiophile system. Using your analogy the car for an audiophile has to be "high performance" while the music lover is content with a car that functions.
Its hard to drive without a car.
I hear music in my head.....
Here's some more food for thought... When you see a live performance, how is that experience different from your headspace when you sit in front of your high end system?When I listen to the "big rig" my mind is busy analyzing the characteristics of the sound; the strengths and weaknesses of the various aspects audiophiles tend to dissect the sound that their stereo produces. This headspace is radically different from the way I approach the experience of live music. Given a choice of one or the other, I'd rather attend a live performance than own the best audio system on the planet any day of the week.
Quote from: Wind Chaser on 1 Mar 2007, 04:03 pmHere's some more food for thought... When you see a live performance, how is that experience different from your headspace when you sit in front of your high end system?When I listen to the "big rig" my mind is busy analyzing the characteristics of the sound; the strengths and weaknesses of the various aspects audiophiles tend to dissect the sound that their stereo produces. This headspace is radically different from the way I approach the experience of live music. Given a choice of one or the other, I'd rather attend a live performance than own the best audio system on the planet any day of the week.This is exactly my point. Home stereo reproduction is so fundamentally wrong that it will always force your brain into analyzing mode. The reason is that it offers wrong and conflicting psychoacoustical clues and your brain has to be busy sorting them out and deciding which one to accept and which one to ignore. It is just not natural. Of course you can learn "your stereo" but in that case every other system - even the live music sometimes- will not be right any more for you.
Have you ever been to a live performance where the acoustics sucked ? I have , it's almost as bad as listening to a crummy stereo . You analyze your home stereo reproduction because it's under your control . A live performance isn't ... you're forced to just sit back , take it all in and enjoy the moment .
Here's some more food for thought... When you see a live performance, how is that experience different from your headspace when you sit in front of your high end system?
Have you ever been to a live performance where the acoustics sucked?