New fantastic room but system pissing off neighbor


I recently moved from a typical tight apartment (though with high ceilings), to a large loft space (35x28X14) and the increase in fidelity I am getting is pretty significant. I think it has to do with obviously having to drive the system much harder, actually opening up the volume pots close to or at 12 o'clock, and mostly giving the speakers much more physical room to breath. I seem to be hearing more detail, better individual instruments and into the music much further. This is aside from the expected added stage depth and width I am now getting.

So that's the good news. However, one neighbor (on the far side of the system over 40 feet away) once casually mentioned to me that sound in this building travels. I was surprised since the building is quite old, of stone, and brick, built like a bunker, was later divided into apartments using cinderblock and sheetrock walls, as opposed to just sheetrock like our old place).

So I looked at what might cause sound leakage, and realized the bathrooms share a common vent. I now make sure to close all bathroom doors before listening, and only listen loud for fairly short times in the afternoon, early evenings, etc. No one downstairs, or in the unit right next to the wall where the system is has complained. Not that it matters that much, but since I play only LP's there is lots of down time in between sides, while LP's are cleaned, periphery ring and clamp is installed, etc, so it's not continuous music by any means.

Now these neighbors that were formerly friendly enough when we saw them in the hallways, seem to not want to talk to us at all, and now seem to go out of their way to be unfriendly. The only thing that has changed is that I got my system up and running.

Should I give up on the idea of playing back music at realistic volumes? (we're only talking about 85 db on average or so, I don't listen that loud)

Should I just forget about it and have the attitude that I'm doing my best to keep doors closed, etc, and that noise is part of urban living, etc.

The funny thing is I've never heard sound from any other apartments, except for faintly, when right next to those bathroom vents.

Listening to music is obviously important and therapeutic for me.

Anyone else dealt with similar problems?
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Soundproof the adjoining walls with your neighbors. Use 545THX Quietrock Drywall. Even better if you can use it on all walls in the audio room. The cinderblock walls between units actually act as transducers. Decouple the speakers and the sub from the floor with spikes or raised platforms that eliminate as much contact with the floor as possible. These improvements will also improve the audio reproduction in your room. It's a win-win situation for you and your neighbors.
http://www.quietsolution.com/html/quietrock.html?gclid=CNjjtbKYr5kCFRFWagodaDABJw
I lived in appartments three times, once in Paris and twice in different cities in Italy.

I used Bose.

My main equipment was left in cartons.

Enough said.
Once you get them going its never enough it seems to accomadate neighbors.Try to enjoy guilt free listening is hard in multi dwelling cicumstances...do your best #&#$ the rest,gooodluck.

You might want to go to a pair of Monitor speakers. The only thing you will miss will be the 80hz room resonance. Monitors don't couple with the floor/walls like typical floor standers. So my bet is you have floor standers. By the way I have a pair of Wilson benesch Trinity's on sale here. Every bit as good as the Magico Mini's and every bit as technology advance too.
Sorry I had to put that plug in there. I will probably have trouble sleeping tonight.
When you have this hobby :

First thing to consider when looking for a place is making sure you can't hear the neighbor's toilets flush, phones ring, rugrats or bedroom activity noise(s)

Places are built like shit with paper thin walls and they charge a fortune to rent them, you're wasting time and money to mask them.

Otherwise, get headphones and tell your neighbors to jump in the lake,
I've been down this road before.