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
Mapman,

It has alway been expensive and most of us have started off knowing very little. I bought my first system when I was making $99/week and it was a cost me just over $800 or 15% of my yearly salary. Much later I bought the Infinity ServoStatics, two ARC stereo amps, and the SP3 for a combined total of $3000 when I was making $15,000 or 20% of my yearly salary. This time was worse as my nurse wife wasn't working while we had young children.

What is worse now, however, is the low standards that youth now has about music and how needy they are of having constant contact and music. We had no smart phones, internet, music everywhere, even outside elevators (meaning that they don't know what elevator music is). I'm not saying that we had it better, but we did have it different.
Yup me too.

I did have the advantage of employee discounts at the time though to help me stretch my very limited student budget that went into both equipment and buying music regularly.

I started off as a kid with a Magnavox record player with built in amp and fold out speakers. Actually that belonged to my older siblings. I really started out myself with a $10 transistor radio, then a $30 8 track player, then a $200 Sanyo compact system as a gift at about 13.

TOday kids start out pretty well with computers, tablets, mobile phones, etc. compared to a transistor radio or even a Sony Walkman. Plus they can download and acces a lot of music for free. SO they have a big head start at their age than many of us older geeks.
IT's probably just "high end" audio as defined in these parts that more do not love.

I think many love good music and good sound and find their version of it in more ways than ever tehse days, often on a limited budget.

Many people do love anything "high end" though in general. Especially if it would fit their lifestyle. Its just that most just want enough good sound to fit their needs. And most also want high end cars, houses, clothing, cigars, mates, etc., the list goes on forever more than they do "high end" audio. The numbers don't lie!
The only solution is to offer better value over time in "high end audio". Then more will come. Will the "high end" vendors profit more or less? Like most things I suppose it all depends.
I doubt if cheaper high end would make much difference. Make something that you can sell for $50,000 and sell ten of and live off that.