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Well the other dealer near me was Sound by Singer and even they wouldn't charge a person....I think this may become a trend to get back at us audiophiles for the hours of time wasting we heap on the salespeople
When folks care it's a passion. When they don't, it's just business.
In order to have a showroom and pay employees (and keep the lights on, etc) it costs a lot of money. Even a small space in a major city other than Chicago, NYC or Los angeles probably costs 5-10 thousand dollars a month when you add up all the costs.You have to keep showing the stuff in the hope that someone is actually going to buy, but if no one buys for a while, you go out of business.
Now, all that said, I think that we make audio purchases too hard with our obsessive concerns for optimization. With the knowledge we have, it is really quite easy to assemble a terrific system at any price point, even if that means relying solely on yard sales and pawn shops. Good enough is good enough and getting there is most of the fun.I have often seen comments from befuddled audiophiles about how musicians don't seem to care about getting good sound from their personal sound systems. That has always amazed me too. I have come to believe, however, that they are enjoying the music without dismantling the presentation. If it really is "all about the music", why not just let it play and not worry so much about any subtle aspect that we may be missing. We're so focused on the trees that we are forgetting the forest. Or "penny wise and pound foolish".
Funny you should mention S by S...Last week I went in to audition a intergrated amp.I was totally floored by how shabby and ill conceived his showrooms are.I'm talking speakers in front of cinder block walls with facing glass doors...I know, not unlike many audio stores, but the discrepancy between his advertising and the store is quite dramatic.How anyone can manage to audition anything in that place is beyond me.
Quote from: macrojack on 21 Jun 2007, 01:43 pmNow, all that said, I think that we make audio purchases too hard with our obsessive concerns for optimization. With the knowledge we have, it is really quite easy to assemble a terrific system at any price point, even if that means relying solely on yard sales and pawn shops. Good enough is good enough and getting there is most of the fun.I have often seen comments from befuddled audiophiles about how musicians don't seem to care about getting good sound from their personal sound systems. That has always amazed me too. I have come to believe, however, that they are enjoying the music without dismantling the presentation. If it really is "all about the music", why not just let it play and not worry so much about any subtle aspect that we may be missing. We're so focused on the trees that we are forgetting the forest. Or "penny wise and pound foolish". A wonderfully thoughtful post! I agree with you completely on this!!
If it really is "all about the music", why not just let it play and not worry so much about any subtle aspect that we may be missing. We're so focused on the trees that we are forgetting the forest. Or "penny wise and pound foolish".
Quote from: macrojack on 21 Jun 2007, 01:43 pmIf it really is "all about the music", why not just let it play and not worry so much about any subtle aspect that we may be missing. We're so focused on the trees that we are forgetting the forest. Or "penny wise and pound foolish".But for a lot of music, IMHO it is the subtle aspects and nuances that really separate the great for the good (or even just the good from the bad). What makes Sonny Rollins different from just any tenor sax player comes a lot from his tone and inflection...similar comments can be made for just about any of the great players (Yo Yo Ma, Wynton Marsalis, Isaac Stern, Jeff Beck, etc).
I had a @#$ expereince at lyric years ago and never went back. Get this "you must leave the listening room, as a very important customer is coming in"
Are we deconstructing music somehow to feed this wierd addiction called audiophilia?