Good Advice


As an old mid-fi'er seeking to upgrade both my old Onkyo receiver and Boston Acoustic speakers, it was great to find this advice in Epinions.

"Dancing on the Diminishing Returns Curve: Choosing Stereo Speakers
Dec 15 '05 (Updated Feb 18 '06)

The Bottom Line Don't go overboard and turn into a "tweak." Buy something inexpensive but good, dial it in, and enjoy the music.

It happened again the other day.

I was at someone's house and they were showing me their $20,000 stereo. Tube amplifiers. Elite CD player. $6,000 speakers. It sounded...great. And boring. Precise imaging. Tight bass. Unbelievable delicacy. And the whole was...less than the sum of the parts. I was unmoved by the music.

And so was the owner, I think.

He had the furrowed brow of someone with audiophilia nervosa, obsessed with achieving audio nirvana and spending his listening time noticing imperfections that could only be improved with a different amplifier, or different speakers, or maybe different interconnects or speaker wires.

He could never be satisfied with his system, and he could never slow down and enjoy the MUSIC.

At home, I have a modest but good system consisting of $1000 speakers, under $1000 worth of solid state amplification (and a $600 tube integrated amplifier which I sometimes use), a modest CD player, turntable, tuner and subwoofer. And the thing is DIALED! It sounds great to me.

Yeah, the imaging is a bit diffuse, inner detail is only good, and the mid-bass is a little round. But who cares? When I listen to music, I enjoy the music. And I'm not thinking about what component to get next, even when I'm sprawled on my bed reading Stereophile magazine.

What did I do right?

I gave up on finding sonic perfection and found components that work well together. And I made sure the cost of each component was on that part of the diminishing returns curve where things flatten out: where large increments in amount spent lead only to small increments in sound improvement.

The bottom line is this: You can have an excellent stereo system for a fraction of what the "tweaks" are paying, and you'll probably enjoy your music more than they do. The speakers are probably the most important component in a home audio system, so shop around and figure out what kind of sound YOU like.

Then have fun assembling an inexpensive system that's 80% or 90% as good as the best out there. After that, forget about the system and enjoy the MUSIC."

Truth is, whether you're spending a 1K or 100K the bottom line (or what should be the bottom line) is the MUSIC and your enjoyment of it. If you lose sight of that, then I would really wonder "what are you spending your money on and what are you trying to accomplish?".
cleaneduphippy
The balance between owning something for the sake of owning it, because its expensive, pretty, or exotic, vs. the pure enjoyment and pleasure it brings to you. They are not mutually exclusive, nor incompatible, just difficult to balance in equal measure. They are yin and yang. You must have some quality in the reproduction (which costs) and you must be able to let go of the objects to enjoy the music. We all suffer from the same illness: wanting to get closer to the music and the artist through our equipment. May we all eventually get to the state where we can forget about the things we have purchased and just listen. (at least for a little while) Now where did I put my Stereophile magazine??
my 1st really good set of speakers- ADS-L810's, looked great and sounded wonderful. at the time they were an expensive investment for me- $900. words cannot express how much i enjoyed them; to this day i miss them. now i have a pair of speakers that cost 60X as much. they are astonishingly good of course, but i have mixed feelings about WHY i do what i do.
if the goal is a lifelike presentation of even the most complex musical signals, i have no problems with what i've done- the dream grew in my consciousness every time i went to hear a live concert. but way before i even had a STEREO, i was happy listening to a tape of beethoven #5 on my concord-220 (mono) reel-to-reel. the other "component" was a blaupunkt am/fm/sw radio. so it's all psychological as far as i'm concerned.
Cleaneduphippy has just said what many of us know is true. equipment is equipment.....spending more won't get you your 'musical' soul back.
I get more enjoyment as my system gets better. This has been going on for me, for many years. My money; my choice but thanks for the input. I don't expect Wilsons where I'm going in the afterlife,probably they will have Bose? Thank God in this life we get to make our own choices and I have no problem with this concept.
Speakers are perhaps the most important part of a system. There are many great sub-$1000 spks. (Rega Jura, Tannoy's, Snell's, ADS, Spendor to name just a few....)But to get the most out of these spks. good amplification is needed to bring out their best. As well as good Interconnects/spk. wire. But the point is that a very musical system need not cost a fortune. French_Fries, I have a pr. of ADS L500's that sound so good. I can only image how good those 810's must have sounded! Regards, Bill.