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

Let me join the crowd born in 1953 to say—happy 70th to all of us and many more years of happy listening! I too have spent years and $$$ to get to the system I have today and like GHDPrentice I don’t regret all the effort to arrive here. Now let’s all keep our hearing—as much as possible. Happy new year to all, both young and old!

Re affordable gear for the yout’ we elders run into—I was with one of my nieces over Christmas and she bought 3 albums at a sale at the library and asked me about some $400 TT-speaker all in one setup she saw at Crutchfield. I recommended she get the new Technics 1500C TT (has a good Ortofon cart and built-in phono stage) and the KEF LSX2 powered speakers for a 3-piece all in one setup! The price went up to $3000 instead of $400 but I caught her attention. I have the LSX2 speakers in my bedroom for TV and Roon and they sound fabulous for the price. You can find them used for around $1000. 

I think an important part of the pleasure and what keeps it interesting is the chase. At different times in your life you chase different things but with audio it is almost always the same - perfection or as close to perfection in sound reproduction as you can get and when you reach that next level it provides a reward. The most interesting thing is that soon there is yet another another step that can be taken to reach that next level in the chase. There is no finish line.

And, what else can you do that provides the possibility of financial stress and pleasure at the same time- i.e. at least that you can do at home? What the hell, it’s only money.

75 here, with 60 years of the chase behind me. Still have the first Heathkit I built, the first decent turntable and speakers that I bought. It’s all been wonderful, and still going. We have about a dozen pairs of speakers inside and outside of the house (no neighbors) and a portable system (small amp and Ascend Acoustics Sierra 2 EX speakers) for travel and hospital use. That’s about the only concession to age. No dedicated listening room or home theater. Every room is for listening, and all systems can be connected via Bluesound.  Music is going close to 50% of the time, throughout the house, inside and out.

“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-- “

 

Yup, you’re right.  But part of the reason is that they haven’t had the opportunity to hear what’s possible, what big ol’ boxes can sound like.  When friends of our kids came over, a number of them showed a lot of interest.  On top of that, they didn’t have the American songbook and the crooners to grow up with.   We definitely lived through the golden years of the birth of high fidelity.  We’re in Lampasas and it’s noticeably absent from the Austin scene, even with SXSW!