DO AUDIOPHILES EVER LISTEN TO MUSIC?


I have'nt checked the archives on this and maybe it's been said before, but I was just thinking, when was the last time I or other audiophile nuts like myself, just listened to the music( No Doobie Brother pun intended). I just recently sold my Quicksilver Mono blocks and sometimes I don't know what to do with myself because I bought a Sim Integrated amp and there aren't any tubes to change. I still manage to pull my speakers out and toe them in or is that out. No I think I'll put them back the way they were yesterday because I know that I noticed a little more bass, but I did notice that the speakers did image better when I pulled them out further. I just think I should sell this amp or get another tube amp because I can modify it by putting some of these extra tubes I kept just in case I bought another one. Well, at least for now I can keep swapping my 10 brands of inter connects to see if that makes a difference. It has to or else I wouldn't have so many pairs. If I can just save enough money for that new 24/96 dac, I'll have the perfect system. I dont have a digital cable so I'll see what Stereophile recommends. I think I'll get some room treatments to cure the brightness or just tear down my drapes to liven up the room. If I just kept those tubes everything would be O.K at least for another day. Am I alone in this or are there maybe one,two or maybe three hundred people who feel the same way as I do. The only time I really listen to music is at my friends house when he has his old Onkyo receiver and Pioneer changer going on random play. It may not sound great but it's fun and I can actually listen to a whole song. This audiophile business is a chore and a pain in the butt, but I would'nt change it for anything else in the world. How about you? Any comments?
chipster

Showing 2 responses by waldhorner3fc4

I've become so obsessed with equipment that I now divide my listening time exclusively between frequency sweeps and pink noise. I grew tired of white noise years ago. Seriously, I have suggested that if you're still able to get into a piece of music when listening to it on a portable mono radio, there remains some hope for you. If the focus of critical listening is predominately the hardware rather than the music, then perhaps not. However, the subject usually at hand here is audiophilia (with occasional tangents into politics, one-upsmanship and insults) and not philharmonia.
Thanks Frogman. As you might glean from my nom de e-mail, I know well of the obsessions of musicians. Objectivity is sometimes difficult to come by in that profession. Many musicians I have known have extensive collections of (whichever is appropriate) mouthpieces, mutes, bows and whatever paraphernalia, and especially instruments, they have suspected might improve, in some way, their sound and/or playing. Much of it has been put aside after failing to produce the desired results. However, as with virtually all things inter-related ,there are definate cause/effect relationships which, when understood, become useful contributors to the end-result. I know of these things because I have experienced them myself.