After fifty years… amazing. What high end audio can be.


I am just enjoying my system. I am in awe of what an audio system can be. I have been listening to Bill Evans in the 60’s and 70’s on my system (see my userId). Having relentlessly pursued the high end for fifty years, alway stretching to achieve the next level. It is so rewarding to have a system that completely surprises and delights me each time I listen to it. What a treat…personally, really well worth the thousands of hours and dollars to achieve it. At 70, glad I did it.

ghdprentice

I wonder if we are the last of a generation that grew up with hi-fi and made it an important part of our lives ... It just doesn't seem to be a priority to some of the younger generation ... I'm not lamenting the loss of the good old days, but I see the changes ... I'm also a geezer and I'm struck by how our world has changed and will continue to change.

Music and media were completely different when we were young, @whart, and were much less fragmented. As a result, a generation could largely define itself through its music which, at the time, often had powerful social messages. That made music a central element of many people's lives and the stereo system was obviously part of that.

Consider this: As late as into the mid-70s, consumer research (in the US) showed the second major purchase contemplated by newlyweds was a stereo system. The Number One primary purchase was a bed.

Yup, "our world has changed." But for many of us, we will always cherish our stereo systems.

@whart

To add some evidence to support your hypothesis… ham radio. Back in the 50’s and 60’s there were the adult nerds with huge antennas sticking up from their houses (modest homes). The talked to people all over the world… other ham operators via short wave. It was at the forefront of hobbies… and was really important communications durin WW2. They are gone… come on, any left would have been killed with the internet.

On the other hand, high end audio is about music. Music is about as fundamentally human thing that is non-essential to survival and continuation of the species. This has never been a “popular” pursuit… it probably never will… but I don’t think it will be going away in the next generation or two. 

 

@ghdprentice - interesting point re ham radio. Yes, agreed, listening won't go away, music won't go away. How we listen- via the types of gear, I think may change- in some ways, it already has- the headphone listeners, the streaming (which I know you are on board with using the big Aurender). I do think we came up in a golden age of hi-fi, from the post-war boom and all that came with that. 

If somebody asked me for advice on a starter system today, I'm not sure what I'd tell them. I doubt I would encourage them to go into vinyl. 

Thanks for the kind response- I certainly didn't mean to be negative. I do think we have it good right now. Lee from TAS posted on another forum that there was a large audience of young people at the Warsaw show. I don't know what those markets are like- I guess my comments have to be limited to my experience in the States.

Bill

ham radio.  ... They are gone… come on, any left would have been killed with the internet.

I have two in my neighborhood, and I live in a town of under 9,000. Other's I don't know have antenae.

As yet, after seven years, I've yet to find another audiophool such yhs.