How long ago did you catch the bug?


My first inkling was about 1972 when a friend mentioned such things as Dual, Thorens, AR, Scott, etc. By '74-'75 I knew about all the Japanese manufacturers (courtesy of a military PX catalog) and about McIntosh. By '76 ​​was using a hand me down all in one Panasonic compact system. The compact system did not last long and very shortly after, '77, came a "proper" 1970's system with such names as Pioneer, Kenwood, Shure, AR, Teac. 

128x128zavato

My parents built a home we moved into in 1963 when I was 9. 

They had installed an HH Scott Receiver teamed with a Garrard TT, Sony 

R2R with Bozak Speakers. That system was likely super warm 

but we loved it. 

@ghdprentice 

Thanks for pointing that out. 😫

Imagine, now, the disparities in initiating musical play with a set up from 1970 to what passes for it today. Even the rewards phase of getting it all going are vastly different and account for a lot of the differing perspectives on what can and can’t benefit a system.

All the best,
Nonoise

I’ve been an audiophile since high school. Growing up with a jazz musician/Caltech scientist father, I wasn’t allowed to use the system in his study: a Fisher 400 receiver, an ELAC/Benjamin Miracord turntable (with styli for both 33 and 78 rpm; he’d been a band leader in the 1940s, and recorded a dozen or so 78s), and KLH speakers. In college, dorm mates had systems I coveted: ESS speakers with that Heil “Air Motion Transformer” tweeter element, double Advent speakers; even a Heathkit receiver that a particularly nerdy friend assembled one summer. Probably the best component in my necessarily modest system in those days was a Thorens turntable with a Micro-Acoustics cartridge. I lost that in a burglary in upstate NY in 1978, along with some Kenwood separates. My Design Acoustics D2 speakers are still with me, though.

In 1969, my parents' fancy Beverly Hills friends gave me "Electric Landyland" for Christmas. At the holiday party at their house, I heard it for the first time on their Bose 901s, professionally set up hanging from the ceiling in the corners. I was a JBL fetishist at the time, and wasn't impressed.

Then, in college, a friend with similar interests took me (it must have been 1970 or '71) to a high-end store in Los Gatos. The salesman was kind of rude to us, knowing we couldn't afford any of his stuff—but he did agree to play Beethoven's Eighth Symphony from the Berlin/Karajan box set that included the Ninth. That was probably my "aspirational" moment: his shop had a properly set-up listening room (with the exception of the Bose, even the good stuff I'd heard to that point had been in dorm rooms). I've been hooked ever since.

For the past 9 years I have two realtors send me real estate listings so I can know what houses are selling for.  I get 2 to 4 listings per day and not once have a seen a pair of speakers standing in a single room.  What also amazes me is I also have not seen surround sound systems with large screen TV's.  A $2 million house with people watch TV and listening to their TV speakers.  How cheap can you get.  Are people allergic to music?  The audiophile community has failed to recruit people to share in this hobby.  I can't imagine having people over for dinner without being able to sit down to listen to music and enjoy wine together.  I think there is something wrong with our society.

@cerrot i remember harmony house on Amsterdam - near Rockefeller U and Sloan Kettering. I thing they were still open as late as around 1990 or so