Why Don't More People Love Audio?


Can anyone explain why high end audio seems to be forever stuck as a cottage industry? Why do my rich friends who absolutely have to have the BEST of everything and wouldn't be caught dead without expensive clothes, watch, car, home, furniture etc. settle for cheap mass produced components stuck away in a closet somewhere? I can hardly afford to go out to dinner, but I wouldn't dream of spending any less on audio or music.
tuckermorleyfca6
A lot of people love music, but simply do not listen critically to the quality of the playback. As audiophiles, we require the best quality playback - within our budgets - to enhance our enjoyment of the music and assembling our playback equipment is part of the enjoyment. It's a hobby for us. Most, however, can get the same enjoyment from music by listening over a car radio or boombox. For example, I cannot understand why someone would buy a Rolex watch, when a $10 Timex does the same job. I can afford a Rolex, I just don't see the point.
Hitman,
I like the "near CD quality" sticker! Figure, CD was hyped as "perfect sound, forever" so "near CD quality" must mean "almost perfect sound, for a long time".
You gotta love marketing.
hi cruz123:

you make a good point. if most people can enjoy music in the car or by listening to a boom box, why spend more ?

enjoyment of music is not dependent upon sound quality.

the purpose of trying to attain excellence of reproduction is to appreciate the beauty of the human voice and the timbre of instruments.

thus there is a dichotomy--sound quality and music appreciation. sound quality is not a necessary condition for enjoying music.

i see three types of audiophiles, gear fanatics, compulsive chasers of accuracy and aesthetic appreciators of the sound of instruments.
I think that most everybody has a driving passion that they sink their time and money into. Some, like golf, are realy mainstream. Others, like sailing are even more niched than audio. Asking why more people don't get into audio is sort of like asking why more people don't get into model trains: it's either in your blood or it's not.

Regarding audio as a status symbol, having a six or seven figure cinema room in your house is a pretty mainstream status symbol for people with high net worth. I know that's somewhat different from the original point about two-channel as a combination of hobby and status symbol, but I thought it fair to bring it up.

On the other hand, plenty of people as well off as those who spend six figures for their cinema opt to spend less than twenty thousand on their A/V rooms. It all comes down to individual priorities. I've met people who didn't even blink at spending fifty thousand on a waterfall in their foyer, but getting ten thousand out of them for a distributed audio system was like pulling teeth.

Wine is another one of those hobby/status things. While I adore expensive beer and spirits, I'm a total savage when it comes to wine. Anything over ten bucks a bottle is wasted on me. And yet, my stock single malts are all $100+, which some think is outrageous, but still isn't even the deep end of that hobby...

Different strokes, ultimately.