@unreceivedogma,
'Many people in this forum themselves care more about convenience.'
Good observation.
In my case I've gradually gone from a manual turntable to a CD player, then personally compiled CDs to avoid changing discs, then Minidisc for even greater editorial flexibility.
More recently, most of my listening is via streaming to my Bluetooth speaker in the garden or headphones whilst walking to and from work.
None of those steps particularly resulted in any improvement of sound quality, but they were all more convenient. I kind of gave in to them too, obstinately resisting CD to the mid 1990s and only recently giving in to buying a Bluetooth speaker, and shock horror - using playlists more frequently.
This is all a far cry from my purist audiophile days of endlessly cleaning stuff and experimenting with cables, stands, and upgrades. I guess I must be getting slower and finding family life far more draining than I ever imagined it would be.
I don't think the restraint and the uncertainty of these last 6 months have helped much either, and now the current plague is at new levels here in the UK.
It's wise to be careful and have some contingency plan in place, but there's little point in letting yourself dwell too long on what might or might happen.
It might, it might not.
My main system is still easily the most enjoyable with simply a bigger and more effortless sound but I just don't buy new music the way I once used to since most of the artists I loved and followed are now dead.
Thank God for Dylan! His last album has easily been the musical highlight of the year for me.
Just before the recent sudden hike in new cases we were discussing re-establishling our Thursday music nights (apparently there's a decent new albums out by The Flaming Lips and Bill Callaghan) but now things are uncertain again.
My passion for music certainly hasn't dimmed but it's not new music, most of it was recorded before the year 2000.
'Many people in this forum themselves care more about convenience.'
Good observation.
In my case I've gradually gone from a manual turntable to a CD player, then personally compiled CDs to avoid changing discs, then Minidisc for even greater editorial flexibility.
More recently, most of my listening is via streaming to my Bluetooth speaker in the garden or headphones whilst walking to and from work.
None of those steps particularly resulted in any improvement of sound quality, but they were all more convenient. I kind of gave in to them too, obstinately resisting CD to the mid 1990s and only recently giving in to buying a Bluetooth speaker, and shock horror - using playlists more frequently.
This is all a far cry from my purist audiophile days of endlessly cleaning stuff and experimenting with cables, stands, and upgrades. I guess I must be getting slower and finding family life far more draining than I ever imagined it would be.
I don't think the restraint and the uncertainty of these last 6 months have helped much either, and now the current plague is at new levels here in the UK.
It's wise to be careful and have some contingency plan in place, but there's little point in letting yourself dwell too long on what might or might happen.
It might, it might not.
My main system is still easily the most enjoyable with simply a bigger and more effortless sound but I just don't buy new music the way I once used to since most of the artists I loved and followed are now dead.
Thank God for Dylan! His last album has easily been the musical highlight of the year for me.
Just before the recent sudden hike in new cases we were discussing re-establishling our Thursday music nights (apparently there's a decent new albums out by The Flaming Lips and Bill Callaghan) but now things are uncertain again.
My passion for music certainly hasn't dimmed but it's not new music, most of it was recorded before the year 2000.