1 - if you don't know what music sounds like in person, before you start on your system, attend some live music performances - as many as necessary to embed the idea of what it sounds like.
2 - accept that it is almost impossible to exactly replicate the in-person experience of a concert in your home
3 - assess every step you take with your system as you develop it and decide whether that last change moved you closer or further from the real thing so you can edge your way up to a best case situation given your spacial and monetary limitations.
4 - arrange for blind testing - have a friend switch things as necessary. If you can't hear any difference due to a change in the system, you just wasted your money (a dealer that allows in home auditioning reduces financial exposure)
5 - don't be in a rush - this usually takes decades, not days.
2 - accept that it is almost impossible to exactly replicate the in-person experience of a concert in your home
3 - assess every step you take with your system as you develop it and decide whether that last change moved you closer or further from the real thing so you can edge your way up to a best case situation given your spacial and monetary limitations.
4 - arrange for blind testing - have a friend switch things as necessary. If you can't hear any difference due to a change in the system, you just wasted your money (a dealer that allows in home auditioning reduces financial exposure)
5 - don't be in a rush - this usually takes decades, not days.