Do people know what they are missing?


I read the following on barrons.com just moments ago and was shocked to think what folks are missing who have never had “industrial strength audio equipment”. 

BARRON’S

By Randall W. Forsyth

Oct. 4, 2019 8:58 pm ET

The 50th anniversary remix edition of the Beatles’ Abbey Road was just released. Even though I already own a pristine British pressing of the original vinyl LP and the 2009 remastered CD, I will buy a copy of the new version to examine further what is the apotheosis of the group’s work. And it will be through big speakers powered by a big amplifier, not through little white thingies dangling out of my ears.

All of which sounds anachronistic. As my former Barron’s colleague Joe Queenan writes, “Industrial-strength audio equipment vanished from the living room long ago.” Now it’s largely relegated to the so-called man cave, supplanted by spouse-friendly tiny smart speakers that emit sounds, but not music that engulfs you, as audio systems did when Abbey Road was released a half-century ago.

END

An mp3 player or smart phone may be convenient to listen to the music that helps you get through tedious jobs like raking leaves outside or cleaning the rain gutters that are beyond the range of an industrial strength sound system, but it will never replace the big sound of a serious system in my house. 

Am I that out of touch with the present day that all folks want is a 192kb encoded mp3 played through tiny ear buds? 

Every time I let someone listen to my system, they seem amazed. 

I just don’t understand these kids today!

Your thoughts?

vintage_heath

I guess I never thought a lot of the world was so much different than I. 

Whenever I am invited to someone’s home for an event, I always like to at least see, or even better to hear, what kind of sound system they have. I think I have seen it all over the years. From all in one book shelf systems bought at J C Penny or Sears, to stellar setups that fill a room like I would imagine most folks who are reading this would own. As a musician myself for over 50 years and a retired semiconductor engineer, most of my friends own what I would consider a fairly state of the art sound system. 

On one occasion, my wife and I were invited to a Christmas party at the home of my then supervisor. It was a pleasant evening and during a quiet moment, I asked my boss and his wife if they enjoyed listening to music. They said yes and I took the opportunity to ask to see, and if possible hear, his system. His wife was engaged in attending to guests, but he took me in to his office. There on his desk was an AM/FM Zenith table radio and nothing else. He noted that he also had one just like it in the family room and the bedroom so he and his wife could listen wherever in the house they may be. I gave it a listen, told him it sounded quite nice and we returned to the main event. 

Sometime later, my wife and I had the opportunity to invite he and his wife to a dinner party at our house. At an appropriate time, I asked if he and his wife would like to move in to my sound room for some drinks and music. They agreed and we went in. His wife asked what all the equipment was and I said it was my music system. It’s where I come when I want to do some serious music listening. She said it looked like “a laboratory at NASA” and took up a lot of space. I asked what she and her husband liked to listen to and found something I thought was appropriate. Afterward, I asked him how he thought it sounded compared to his system. His response was, “about the same”. For a moment, I was a little taken back, (my wife said I had a look on my face akin to watching your best friend stepping on a land mine and being blown to bits) but I thanked him for his honest opinion and the evening moved on. 

Later that night, as I lay in my bed, I thought to myself that maybe he was better off. After all, his three AM/FM Zenith table radios made him and his wife happy. They did take up a lot less space than my system and if I had the same, I would have room for a pool table or maybe a game room. In addition, I would also have saved a lot of money as I am positive that those table radios cost considerably less than my system, but then I thought to myself, no way! 

I turned off the light and fell asleep comforted in knowing that my supervisor and I each got the music system that made them happy and I guess that’s what it is really all about.


Hello vintage_health,

     Nice post with a good moral to the tale!  I generally agree with the philosophy of 'whatever floats your boat' and that we all have our own priorities which are typically reflected in our music systems as well as other personal luxuries.  But I can tell your boss likely isn't in charge of quality assurance at your facility.
     If he's an engineer, it's surprising how oblivious to, and non-discerning of, such wide variances in quality levels he apparently is.  You can lead a horse to water, …..


Tim
I think young people appreciate great systems just fine and I think many of them will do their own systems in time. When I was a kid ear buds and MP3 players were not even a dream, car systems sucked and in order to hear the music right you had to have some sort of system. It was also easy to do a system on the lam. We had several kit manufacturers and the used market was very healthy. Things were much cheaper. Today kids have all sorts of inexpensive stuff so that they can listen, and face it, we may not like MP3 players but relative to the portable stuff we had back then these things are a miracle. 
Young folks will do systems when they have the money and the room. The love of music is certainly there.
I've demonstrated my system for quite a few people. Some were impressed with the sound quality. Some were impressed with the size of the speakers and the speaker cables.
Not a single one was impressed with the SQ enough to spend a single dime pursuing it on their own and all of them thought me odd for caring and I'm not even a serious audiophile.
So yes, I think we're out of touch. And yes, it is a loss for those who will never appreciate good music reproduced properly. When I was a teenager most boys my age wanted the best sound system they could get. And there was, at the least, a Circuit City in every city.

But it isn't just the fans. Production quality of new music tends to stink. Even bands who work hard on production in the studio are letting the dynamic range of their stuff get compressed to the point where no level of equipment is going to make it decent.
I know beating up on millenials is a common cliche'. And I know I'm a typical old man even before my time.....but I think in most aspects of life and stuff in general they have lost the appreciation for quality. And when a generation doesn't know what quality is, or care about it even if they do.....then quality is no longer a marketable commodity.