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In Reply to: RE: Is highend audio evil science? posted by AbeCollins on January 16, 2017 at 11:21:10
As in other 'high-priced' items.......
I heard someone talking about the clothing industry and was remarking that Women's Clothing on Average costs 2 to 3 times more than Men's Clothing and was wondering why? The answer, according to the Retail Clothing expert is that Women will pay more than Men....Cut-Throat
Follow Ups:
I don't know if it's still common practice to charge women more for dry cleaning.
Furniture also has a huge markup but you can usually see and feel the differences in high quality vs the more main stream department store furniture. It's all very high margin stuff though.
I have been trying to get the best sound I could afford for 50 years. This is what I have noticed:
Gear that will fully deliver the musical experience has become much cheaper. A Mac Mini driving a Mytek Brooklyn and HD800 gives a deep experience. I can listen a little longer and a little deeper by outputting the Mytek to a Leben 300 (I am so little interested in gear I would have to get up and look, to see which Leben 300 it is; it is the one that does not hum). The Leben sounds great driving ancient Rosinante Signatures, but when I really listen I use cans.
An iPhone driving a dragonfly and good portable phones will give you a remarkable experience of the music for what it costs.
If you want speakers it will cost you a lot more to get the musical experience.
Systems that move a lot of air in large spaces with good acoustics are a great experience for music that you want loud, but it probably has as much to do with the space and power was the gear. This will help dance music and other kinds of music where the experience is as much physical as auditory. Really getting a kick in the solar plexus costs a lot of money. That's fun but I can satisfy the need by going to live performances.
If are interested in things like the difference in sound in the great violins that many professional violinists play, you will probably need really highest end gear from your AC power source to the room. That level of detail is hard to come by.
I heard a system once, playing vinyl, in which the illusion was so perfect that one could tell where Louis Armstrong was standing and how tall he was. I think there are relatively few recordings that have that kind of detail, and it is a kind of parlor trick. I think the turntable in that system cost more than any system i have ever owned.
Getting to interested in the details of the sound will distract you from listening to the music.
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