I've been to two audio shows; AXPONA last year and the Tampa show this winter. I think the thing that struck me most was an almost complete disconnection between the price and the quality of sound. I heard modest systems that sounded wonderful and I heard 6 figure systems that sounded awful - at least to my ears. Granted, the best sounding system IMO at last year's AXPONA was also the most expensive (VAC, Von Schweikert - $1 million) but there were several reasonable systems that were amazing. The other thing I came away with is that my 90's vintage system (Krell, Mirage) sounds pretty darn good.
Some Thoughts on Axpona 2019--from an Axpona Newbie
Lifelong music lover and player here. I went to my first Axpona this weekend. I wanted to share a few things to see what others think.
1. One day is not enough. I had a buddy and a game plan. There still was way too much to do and see to get it done in a day!
2. Meeting certain manufacturers, engineers, designers, reviewers who are essentially "famous" in my hifi mind was super cool.
3. There were some expensive rooms (I'm defining that as systems with pieces of kit north of $25,000 piece and overall $75,000 and above for the system) that weren't all that great. In some of those rooms I thought that if I had that money to spend I'd buy lesser priced gear because it sounded better to me.
4. Speaking of budget gear, the Elac room (bookshelf speakers) and the Wharfedale room (Linton speakers) sounded so great--notwithstanding their small price tags.
5. My favorite "big money" room was the VTL/Stenheim Alumine Five loudspeakers room. The sound here was spellbinding.
6. Many folks running the systems were pushing the loudspeakers too hard. In my humble opinion, they needed to back down the volume as things could start to sound harsh.
7. I loved meeting Clinton and hearing Spatial Audio speakers in person.
8. My personal favorite for near $10k in loudspeakers was Volti Rivals.
I'm definitely going to be doing this again next year!
1. One day is not enough. I had a buddy and a game plan. There still was way too much to do and see to get it done in a day!
2. Meeting certain manufacturers, engineers, designers, reviewers who are essentially "famous" in my hifi mind was super cool.
3. There were some expensive rooms (I'm defining that as systems with pieces of kit north of $25,000 piece and overall $75,000 and above for the system) that weren't all that great. In some of those rooms I thought that if I had that money to spend I'd buy lesser priced gear because it sounded better to me.
4. Speaking of budget gear, the Elac room (bookshelf speakers) and the Wharfedale room (Linton speakers) sounded so great--notwithstanding their small price tags.
5. My favorite "big money" room was the VTL/Stenheim Alumine Five loudspeakers room. The sound here was spellbinding.
6. Many folks running the systems were pushing the loudspeakers too hard. In my humble opinion, they needed to back down the volume as things could start to sound harsh.
7. I loved meeting Clinton and hearing Spatial Audio speakers in person.
8. My personal favorite for near $10k in loudspeakers was Volti Rivals.
I'm definitely going to be doing this again next year!
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- 13 posts total
- 13 posts total