But I think what these guys are trying to do is get people back to the time where having a good stereo in the house was the norm. My parents had a Harmon Kardon receiver with EV speakers in the 60's. All of my friends had decent hifi's in their bedrooms from the days when they sold stereo in Sam Goody record store. I think, Wolf, what you are talking about are the high-end neurotics like us, which absolutely is a small minority. Frankly, I think their business model of selling expensive stereo to young people has a very small chance of success, but then again, who thought that people would ever love watching movies on a 4" phone? As I said above, these guys didn't just drop in from a cloud - they are experienced NYC audio salesmen, who believe they know the market. Speaking of which, while I'm not in the market for anything right now, I have no desire to see this place, as they have made it pretty obvious that the over-30 crowd is pretty much personna non grata there. That's ok. I don't want to kill their vibe.
Audio for the Young - Noho Sound
Just came across the website of Noho Sound and Stereo in NYC. They claim to be marketing to the under-30 crowd and believe they have come up with the right marketing formula. They are experienced NYC audio salesmen, so I guess they believe they know the market well enough to make this work. They are running weekly music events, presumably to attract the younger crowd to their store and then hoping they will buy a McIntosh amplifier or the like. Who knows? Certainly not me. They want to make owning this stuff hip for the young to own. Look - Beats convinced people that $500 headphones were cool and every kid wanted a pair. So it can be done.
https://www.nohosound.com/
https://www.nohosound.com/
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- 12 posts total
- 12 posts total