Rant against the industry with hopes for discussion on positive change


As a 20 year hobbyist who has worked around the industry and made tons of contacts I really worry about the future of this hobby. 
 

For the last 30 years the industry has catered to an aging  clientele which I can tell you as a used gear guy a large percentage of my inventory comes from audiophiles who have passed away and at 38 i rarely meet people my age or near who are hobbyists. 
 

The industry is about the shadiest mainstream industry that has fought standards tooth and nail which is why amp and speaker ratings are all over the place confusing and discouraging the casual consumer. 
 

Millenials and Gen Z have spoken loudly that they won’t support shady business practices however market trends show that like audiophiles they bought a cheap Bluetooth speaker, than eventually a better and eventually a nice one. They want a option that is currently really only available from Devialet and a couple other manufactures. 
 

Also sales people use the technique that “you don’t know how to listen to music, you need to sit motionless in one spot” music reproduction needs to adapt to modern life where people are living smaller spaces with far more media options than ever before. 
 

As a guy on the border of Gen X and millennial I’ve built 4 rigs for friends over the years because I always get the response of “I can’t give up a whole wall, that’s insane” 

 

I would really like to see a company make a 12” and 15” Tannoy gold tv stand with volume control, bass, treble and loudness knobs as well as USB charging with an outlet strip on the back and a shelf for a PS5 or Xbox… that way they get big clean sound for example

 

What are y’all’s thoughts on ways the industry can still thrive and meet the new demands of consumers while getting good music to more people? Without a new influx I don’t see how the majority of brands and brick and mortars and stay on business due to a decline in clientele

128x128systembuilder

The issue of "attention spans" is a very serious one. The hifi industry is just the tip of an iceberg which threatens humanity.

Why? Because distraction and fragmentation are the enemies of a coherent sense of history and memory. We need both of those to learn from past mistakes, hold our leaders to account, and to trust some of our longer-term methods, such as science.

If anyone wants to see who profits off the destruction of attention, I suggest you read Shoshana Zuboff's book on surveillance capitalism. This is where the money is, short term, and where our undoing lies, long term.

musicians are hopeless!! hahaha!! man is that true!

spot on, @bdp24! im a musician, im 47, been making music since i was a small child, been playing out since the late 80s. made a lot of records on top-tier gear in top-notch studios...and at home id listen to all these records and the rest of em on  my $60 used turntable plugged into salvaged, freebie hand-me-down BPC and basic disposable speakers of the era.

...or beat up car stereo, or walkman, or computer, or phone plugged in to something. 

never occurred to me to do anything else. 

ive always had a massive music collection and never took any interest in good hifi til a coupla years ago. 

got interested in hifi coupla years ago. 
 

+1 @hilde45 

Couldn't agree more.  This is nearly an analog to PRaT, whereas the Pace of life is nearly "off the chart".  The Rhythm of daily events as I knew them as a kid seems missing completely.  The Timing of events seems to be self-serving for the real decision makers (whomever the hell they are).  Sad commentary.

The high-end will be here as long as we are.  Just like any other group of companies some will grow and change while others fall.  It is out of our hands.

Regards,

barts

 

@systembuilder I agree with the bulk of what you are saying about our hobby. The one thing that bothers me about this hobby is however, the listening in the “sweet spot” mentality. While, I understand the concept and have enjoyed listening with my share of beverages locked in on my couch, it is no longer where I want to be. I have an open room house, I enjoy listening to the same critical things coming out of my system I have always, but out and about in my home. Yes listening while doing other things. This make me happy and brings me joy to this hobby. Does that make me any less of an “audiophile” I think not and I really don’t need any salesman telling me how I should enjoy my system. Interesting topic! 

I inherited this hobby from my father. Being right at the edge between M. and Gen X.

1) It’s a solo hobby

2) It requires a good amount of dedicated time

3) It is expensive

4) It requires dedicated space

5) It does not give wow points in the friends circle

Until the kids are self sufficient and excess disposable income is available, which is usually in your 40s it is simple for many not a good lifestyle choice. 
 

I can listen maybe 2 hours a week which when looking from an investment perspective is not good use of the money invested.

Many here are retired or the kids are out of the house. Completely different perspective and lifestyle.