un-becoming an audiophile


Yes, the title is what is sounds like.

I remember long ago, as a boy, I used to be able to enjoy music without picking apart a track. is the bass tight? is the midrange clear and life-like? is the treble resolution spot on? What about imaging/sound stage?

Most people have this very same superpower - not being an audiophile. They can play a song from the worst earbuds, laptop speakers, or even computer speakers - and enjoy the music; even sing along. They aren’t thinking about "how it sounds" or scrutinizing the audio quality. Actually, they couldn’t care less. They can spend their time on other life pursuits and don’t feel a need to invest big money (or much money at all) in the hi-fi hobby.

Any psychologists or scientists in the building? (please no Amir @amir_asr ) since you are neither! ...despite the word "science" being in your domain name - audio science review.

Please, I beg you. Help me get away from this hobby.

Imagine - being able to enjoy all of your favourite music - while still achieving that dopamine rush, along with serotonin, and even oxytocin - the bonding hormone, which can be released while listening to songs with deep emotional messages, or love songs.

We’re very much like food critics or chefs in a sense. We want the best of something (in this case, audio) I’m sure michelin star chefs face the same thing in their own right...can’t enoy or even eat the food unless it’s up to a certain standard.

When we audiophiles want to listen to music, we often play it on a resolving system, so as to partake in a a "high-end" listening experience. We often pick apart music and fault the audio components in our system, cables etc. All of this takes away from the experience of enjoying music as a form of art/entertainment. It has been said that some famous artists don’t even own a high-end audio system.

I gained a great deal of wisdom of from the documentary - Greek Audiophile. In it, we have audiophiles from all walks of life. Their families think they’re crazy for spending all this money on audio. They say it sounds "nice" or "real" but still can’t justify it.

I think it’s all in the brain. If we can reset our brains (or me at least) I can still enjoy music without needing a great system for it.

- Jack

 

jackhifiguy

Isn’t it Audiophile in this site is define , someone who really spend good amount of money on their system? But barely have time to enjoy music but enjoy analyzing the system instead? I agree if you can’t afford it , you can still put up a good system  to enjoy music. My ELac B6 pair with my Norh leamp mono they sound good and musical.But those who have money likes to have the best, so they spend a lot on audio.

Successful people are often driven to pursue and excel in their hobbies. They may have budgets that most people don't. I think for the average person getting the most bang for your buck is the goal. That might be a $3000 dollar system or a $50000 dollar system or more! Yes you can assemble a good sounding system for very little money but unless you are very young and have no full time job a serious hobbyist is looking to get beyond big box store equipment and small 300 buck bookshelf speakers. 

@simonmoon

First of all, it seems to imply a ’no true Scotsman’ fallacy. As if, being an audiophile negates the ability to love music first, and foremost.

When I set down to listen to music, I am fully immersed in the music. I do not sit there taking about the track. I fully am sucked in to the listening experience, not the gear. I am transported by the music.

The OP also seems to imply a false dichotomy. As if, being a music lover excludes one from being an audiophile, or vis versa. What about those of us that are both?

There seems to be some misunderstandings...between what I wrote and how it was interpreted by you.

You are fully immersed in the music...because you have become familiar with your system and it’s probably an excellent system, too. It checkmarks all or most of the audiophile terms. And when laypeople hear/experience it, they tell you it was money well spent/sounds amazing etc. right? But they won’t invest their own funds to replicate your system...they listen like 98% of the population...ok probably 90% or more...

I never intended to create that fallacy or a false dichotomy. But I ask - why not just agree, instead of agreeing to disagree?

I am specifically talking about becoming a non-audiophile; a regular person, someone who is no longer interested in hearing the music exactly or close to how it was recorded. The overwhelming majority of people listen to music this way. They might be less stressed, have more time for other hobbies, earning potential, work/side hustle etc. Listening to music on a good system is addictive and time-consuming.

For example, when the iPod was first released, I could name more than a dozen people in my own life that were happy as a fiddle with those .mp3s and apple earbuds. BOSE speakers in a kitchen. Some no-name branded stereo that was so lousy from walmart in a bedroom...The 20 something owner loved it. You get the idea...

Certainly, you can be both a music lover and an audiophile. But take your own audio system out of the picture - are you still a music lover? Can you still enjoy music? If so, what’s the point of your system?

I’m talking about forgetting; at a fundamental level, since this hobby is not that popular and others don’t understand it, but also because letting go will allow me to save money, time, and achieve the same happy neurotransmitters fumbling about in my brain. Make it all about about the music...to the point where the gear doesn’t matter. That is my goal.

I plan on achieving this through talking to my cousin - she is a psychologist; reading more posts on audiogon, and slowly but surely re-setting my brain to demand less.

Just like eating cold-cuts or hot dogs every day for lunch. Stay away from what my pops calls "rich foods" and eventually you might not miss them all that much...

takes more than a mere "job" to afford this hobby, more like somebody with a professional degree/CV and 6+figure salary. 

Once you’re in, you can never get out. It’s like somebody told me one time. Be careful what you put in your head because once you put it in there you can never get it out. It makes a lot of sense but unfortunately I think you’re stuck.

takes more than a mere "job" to afford this hobby, more like somebody with a professional degree/CV and 6+figure salary. 

I'm not sure what salary range is needed to enjoy this hobby today. One of my smaller systems was around $3500 and is very satisfying. If you want to, you can find a way.