I think one of the central issues here is the fact that the high-end is catering to, and in some cases conning, a very obsessive group of people. (Not that its easy to feel sorry for someone who is willing to spend many thousands of dollars on cables!) Sound quality and 'musicality' are very elusive and subjective things. There are so many variables involved: state of mind, background noise, rooms, combinations of components that are all 'voiced' differently, quality of cables, power, etc. Add to this that the value of 'specs' has (correctly) been dismissed as a meaningful determinant of quality, - and the wolves are loose in the henhouse… er, maybe that's a little strong, but at least it is extremely easy for marketers to seduce people with false or exaggerated claims that are almost impossible to disprove.
I once contacted an esoteric cable manufacturer to see if they could convince me that their cables were worth buying (for their weight in gold). They could not, in fact their reasoning and justification for their prices did not even make sense. Even if their cables do sound good, (do cables make sound?!) what could they possibly do to a cable to make it cost as much as a car, honestly!
And consider active amplification (there are several Audiogon threads about this at the moment). It is a more efficient and logical approach to loudspeaker-amp design, but few manufacturers do it – and why would they? Why start extolling the virtues of active playback to a crowd of people who love-to-love their gear – to have all that tasty stuff up there on the rack or glowing on its throne-like plinth on the floor. Oh, and to play with cables! Moreover it’s all the variables that help to maintain the confusion that leads to compulsive gear swapping and upgrades. Buy a pair of active speakers with perfectly matched amplification and the quest for perfection is over - you can't even try out different speaker cables - because you don't need any. Hmmm...
Back to the old debate: Is gear a means to and end or is it the end itself?
For me? I will accept that it’s a bit of both. Having a system that can bring me musical bliss is a kind of freedom - almost like having the peace of mind in knowing that I can go off on an adventure whenever and wherever I want. Except with music I don’t have to take time off of work or quit my job. It’s like having a window to another world – and the better the system the better the view. So in addition to playing music wonderfully, it’s the POTENTIAL of the system to open up musical worlds to me that is important.
I would really hate to think that the manufacturer of my system was taking me for a fool – that they were determining their prices based on what the market will bear rather than on materials and on time invested in paying good people to research, design, develop, and build, high quality products, plus perhaps a little for advertising - as long as it is discreet, informative, and in good taste.
The kind of people who obsess over the quality of music reproduction (sound reproduction?) to the extent that many audiophiles do, comprise a finite market in a competitive industry. I believe that it will debase the industry if companies are out there peddling products that are priced according to anything other than the factors mentioned above. I have no doubt that some of the more expensive gear out there is not worth a fraction of what it sells for and that the only reason it sells at all is because of questionable ethical standards in the audiophile press. Some companies have to sell their gear for thousands in order to survive – but that doesn’t mean that it represents good value, is solidly engineered, or that it has the priceless touch of a gifted designer. It may just mean that the company has figured out how to exploit the myth that high quality means huge dollars. Let’s face it, how much has tube amplification evolved in the last 20, let alone 50 years? Can manufacturers justify charging enourmous sums just because of how their products are voiced (read: equalized)?
But I guess that’s what Audiogon classifieds are for? - Determining the 'real' value of goods? I must admit that I get a certain satisfaction when I see a pair of $2000/metre cables sell for 300 bucks in an auction (swweeet poetic justice). This doesn't always work however. Sometimes you see excellent products, often made by European companies with no established reputation and little exposure to the US market, but who are trying to make inroads, sell for what must be a huge loss. I’m sure there are many excellent projects that have been started and abandoned because solid new companies can’t compete in an industry where myths and false claims are the norm. This is where it hurts the industry as a whole. Not to mention that just about every time I am forced to listen to music outside my own house it makes my ears bleed.