What is an audiophile? Are you an audiophile?


I had been pondering this question since I have been involved in audio. Not sure what audiophile means. I went to a few fellow audio gurus get together events and although I had fun and liked the company, I felt out of place. In fact of the opinions and passion people here on Audiogon have, I do not have such strong attachments. So what is your take.... are you an audiophile? If you are, how do you know?
128x1282psyop
I guess I’m not.
While I do appreciate listening to high end equipment, I also can be happy listening to my office setup, a Kenwood receiver, Sony CD player and some Yamaha speakers that are aimed right at my ears.

All the best.

JD
I much prefer the term "Music Lover." The equipment is only the vehicle we "Music Lovers" use to get us closer to the music, or the music closer to us. I’ll take a plain-Jane black box if it is less expensive than a gold-plated one if the music conveyed is the same.

Frank
I much prefer the term "Music Lover." The equipment is only the vehicle we "Music Lovers" use to get us closer to the music, or the music closer to us.


well said o-papa!
I call myself an audio enthusiast because the term audiophile is too often associated with someone who believes in snake oil and myths.

I don't ever use the word "audiophile" to label myself because I just like good music and good sound -whatever form it comes in. From my experience, many audiophiles are pretty pretentious so I tend to avoid such groups, don't tell people I like hifi and audio and definitely could care less about debating topics on what equipment is good. I;d rather ask someone what they like in something and why -hearing THEIR story is much more interesting to me than arguing why MY stuff is better than theirs and how that makes me a better audiophile.

As someone that works in a studio for a living, I am around equipment that dwarfs the cost of any audiophile equipment setup so I don't bother with the pissing contest in audiophile circles because it loses the point of it all: to simply enjoy the music.

Great post!

i wil only add that to enjoy music we must forget price tag and put in place the necessary acoustic condition in a room to enjoy the experience... And this has NOTHING to do with price tag....

A dedicated room is the only luxury in audio....

 

As someone that works in a studio for a living, I am around equipment that dwarfs the cost of any audiophile equipment setup so I don’t bother with the pissing contest in audiophile circles because it loses the point of it all: to simply enjoy the music.

I am not an audiophile. I enjoy music too much to consider myself an audiophile. 

I really love to listen to music in my home. I listen daily, and I quite enjoy high quality reprodution of the music. Over the years I have put together a very nice system of equipment that was somewhat expensive for me and I sometimes look in here and other sites to learn about what might be new stuff that can be even better. I think all of that makes me an audiophile.

By the way, my system is Meridan 508.24 cd player, Cambridge Streamrer and DAC, Rega Planar 5 record player, Musical Fidelity integrated amp and Epos M22 speakers using QED cables.

I am lover stallion heartbreaker of woman around the world. I rip body fat wallet and fast car. More than all those thing beside heartbreaker I good audiophile with golden ear and best taste fear.

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I think audiophiles love music. And consequently often are involved in activities related to music.  
 

If you are an audiophile you could enjoy a new listening experience- system, artist, genre, etc. Doesn’t mean you’re going to like it but willing to try it. 

I think audiophiles love music

I sometimes wonder whether the inverse is true……I was on a thread here where a guy was asking for tracks that would show off his speakers, and appeared ecstatic because he had a system that allowed him to listen to his speakers without the music distracting him

just how rare is this behaviour?

@pesky_wabbit 

"I sometimes wonder whether the inverse is true…"

You're not the only one who wonders this! 

 

Because of complete ignorance of acoustic and psycho-acoustic they listen to the sound "tasted" of their gear...

They dont even understand what is the "timbre" musical experience....

Complete ignorance transform in an obsession with a relatively very bad system at any price...

How a system at any price can sound very good or at his peak potential WITHOUT acoustic control of the room ?

It is impossible sorry...

Anyway they listen to atrocious commercial music also....Most of the times... 😁😊

 

I sometimes wonder whether the inverse is true……I was on a thread here where a guy was asking for tracks that would show off his speakers, and appeared ecstatic because he had a system that allowed him to listen to his speakers without the music distracting him

just how rare is this behaviour?

@pesky_wabbit 

I sometimes wonder whether the inverse is true

I think it is true for a lot of audiophiles. 

My current dream system consists of Steinway Lyngdorf Model A's for 2 Channel and the BeoVision Harmony television in the same room. 

Now if they would ever send me my sweepstakes winnings, I could start on making it a reality but unsure if I will qualify for that Audiophile title.

 

Sometimes, though having gone to bed, I can’t sleep for hours just thinking of the way I was moved by the music I just experienced for the last hour or 2 or 3. Didn’t think of the equipment just the joy.

Ninety-nine percent of the time, good audio gear makes the music you like sound better.  In turn, high fidelity is a wonderful facilitator of making your musical experience more enjoyable. Of making the music you like more deeply felt.

Ninety-nine percent of the time, good audio gear makes the music you like sound better.  In turn, high fidelity is a wonderful facilitator of making your musical experience more enjoyable. Of making the music you like more deeply felt.

in theory, yes, but the owners of an awful lot of high end gear end up dissecting the sonics of the music, rather than enjoying it as an immersive experience

Several posters gave you the REAL MEANING of " Audiophile ". Once you all establish and understand this meaning, you will see, YOU ALL ARE....The End ! Enjoy ! MrD.

You know you are one when you own multiple copies of the same album in hopes that one will be THE pressing....also when you have taken over half of your wife’s living room, and when your house Is stuffed to the gills with cd’s, Lp’s, Cassettes, mini discs, etc...as well as extra equipment not even being used. I’m either an Audiophile or a Horder, or maybe a little of both...I'm most likely more so a music lover, all types, as I generally don't Always care about the quality, ie record surface noise, tape hiss, etc...I can still find a way to just enjoy what I'm playing at the time. 

Who cares is absolutely correct. If you dont spend enough, according to some, you are not an audiophile. If you spend too much you are not an audiophile. I like music and I like the way a better system brings me closer to my music. Call me what you want but if my standards and system goals differ from yours that shouldnt change this definition.

"...the owners of an awful lot of high end gear end up dissecting the sonics of the music, rather than enjoying it as an immersive experience"

Yes. . . and furthermore, they will swear up and down that it's the music they care about, first and foremost!  

I am not a gear fetichist and not an obsessed upgrading fool chasing and "tasting" sounds ...

Then i am not a failed audiophile....

 

But i know that ACOUSTIC and PSYCHO-ACOUSTIC science can help a speakers/room to deliver a marvellous sound/music experience...

I listen an opera right now after some jazz...

What ami I ?

A succeeding audiophile who has studied acoustic instead of reading audio reviewers of gear and will never need to upgrade his low cost but very well chosen system...

Because acoustic has nothing to do with "taste" about gear, i listen music not sound of amplifiers or dac or even speakers....

😁😊

And read me correctlly, i perfectly know that any piece of gear sound different, but this difference is DWARFED by the huge improvement with acoustic control OPTIMIZATION over your Speakers/room...

Being a wise Audiophile dont means that the ratio S.Q./price is meaningless it is the opposite....It is the main meaningful parameter all over the journey...

 

 

«A piece of tubular wood with holes is an acoustic instrument and knowing how it work in different caverns is enough to figure out all acoustic»-Anonymus acoustician

«Acoustic is a prehistoric phenomena » -Anonymus acoustician

 

A lover of music is a person that can sit and listen to music on any system regardless of the quality or cost.

An Audiophile cannot.  If the reproduction of music isn't up to their quality standards, it will drive them out of the room.  Like hearing finger nails across a chalk board.  or as is my case, styrofoam.

To me, it isn't necessarily the costs of the equipment that matters, but how well that equipment reproduces the music.  Often, costs does play a factor, as most times (not always) you get what you pay for.  But not always.

An Audiophile knows what musical instruments actually sound like and can discern whether or not a system is accurately reproducing the musical instruments.  Or dimensionality, sound stage, etc.  This is all dependent on whether the artist actually used real instruments in their recordings, miked correctly for sound stage, etc.  if it isn't there in the recording, then it isn't there and just enjoy the music for what it is.

But an Audiophile isn't necessarily an audio snob, just like a wine enthusiast isn't necessarily a wine snob.  There are audiophiles that are snobs and wine enthusiast that are wine snobs.  But, they are just snobs regardless.

Same for car, watch, book, fashion, art, etc. enthusiast.  Doesn't make them snobs.  just enthusiast or experts.  

Snobs rub your face in their absolute (in their opinion) understanding that they and only they know everything to know about a subject.  I joke that a snob is someone that tells you what you like.

Anyway, enjoy

 

@minorl 

I've never enjoyed music more than when I was 8 years old, listening to WABC on a  transistor radio in bed on cold winter nights. To me, it's the physical/emotional/spiritual connection with music that I most treasure-- in the end it's far more important than having a high-end system. 

Snobs rub your face in their absolute (in their opinion) understanding that they and only they know everything to know about a subject. 

Yep. There's one a few posts above.

Let’s not forget that music reproduced by Hifi is a step backwards fidelity wise, compared to how music had been enjoyed since its inception. Music was always played live and in person, often by family members to entertain each other.

Being an audiophile is nothing more than seeking the experience of being in the same acoustic space as when the music was performed, to be able to experience as closely as possible the musical intent of the musicians and composers.

Audiophiles have kept alive the lost activity of sitting just really listening to music. I would venture to say a very small percentage of the population sits down to do nothing other than listen, just as one would during a performance.


Today music is a background, a soundtrack for life while we’re doing other things.

Audiophiles are deep music listeners, lovers of the emotion behind the music. We appreciate the beauty and tone of the compositions. We seek to be moved, excited, and most of all to experience the drama of the performance.

I sometimes joke that I have the best jazz club in the city. I get to spend time with many of the long gone legends of music. But they are resurrected nightly through sonic holograms that allow me to share the same sonic space of the original event.

To travel back in time to Rudy Van Gelder’s living room, to a Bill Evans club date, to a performance whose master tape was long ago damaged or lost in a fire.


The deep focus on the music is almost meditative. The subtle cues of live music recreated allow the emotion to flow. There’s an intimacy between performer and audience that occurs when everything is dialed in, and it’s thrilling.

And while we all have our test tracks and reference cuts used to evaluate the system, once that critical phase is completed, out comes the music that is played for pleasure. As my system gets better and better, it’s not fewer recordings that sound good, but more recordings, average and even ancient.

 

Nobody in his sane mind can contest this fact...

Music is a spiritual experience way over the acoustic one....

Music is a therapeutic nevermind the system /room price tag or S.Q.

An audiophile is like what the poster above suggest  someone who learn each day how to listen, enjoying music ...

To me, it’s the physical/emotional/spiritual connection with music that I most treasure-- in the end it’s far more important than having a high-end system.

@mahgister 

"Music is a therapeutic nevermind the system /room price tag or S.Q."

Yes -- vibrational therapy! 

I gotta say that emaillists really has a handle on the best sense of what being an audiophile is/ought to be. It's not the gear that matters. It's what the gear delivers.

Yes, yes I think emaillists has it right. I do agree with what he said completely. My grandfather had lots of vacuum tubes and now I have a tube amp. I NEVER imagined that listing to music through those glass bottles piped into speakers would bring me so much contentment and peace.

Why do we even need to separate the gear from the experience? One would need to get into the mind of another enthusiast to really know their motivations. This is all just a huge spankfest and it is a total waste of time. Such conversations are prompted by all sorts of reasons; none of which are related to audio. 

Exactly my point. Thanks! Because of course anyone who spend (insert amount) is gullible and thus an audiophile.  Dont get you started on tweeks and cables right?

Not an audiophile. I lack the necessary gullibility gene.

Exactly my point. Thanks! Because of course anyone who spend (insert amount) is gullible and thus an audiophile. Dont get you started on tweeks and cables right?

Prejudice against all people categorized the same in a group BLIND the judgment sorry...

i am an audiophile, i dont upgrade and buy nothing...

My system is basic , good but low cost...

All my "tweaks" are homemade, effective, and cost nothing or very low...

And my ratio S.Q. /price is over the roof...

Then?

Why not thinking before speaking  and  judging group of people?

I was on a thread here where a guy was asking for tracks that would show off his speakers, and appeared ecstatic because he had a system that allowed him to listen to his speakers without the music distracting him

Not sure your assumption is really correct.  To me it's more like having a sports car and asking for other drivers to recommend  roads that I can enjoy with it.  It's not always the destination it can be the journey. That and if you're posting here you at least have audiophile tendencies or you'd be posting somewhere else,  maybe on a quilting site.

I'm personally not hung up on labels  Am I an audiophile?  I meet the definition.  Am I music lover?  Meet that definition too but hopefully I'm more of a positive influence than negative. 

When do I get my chip?

It is a pleasure to talk to sane people, welcome...Especially this time and in this year...

I'm personally not hung up on labels  Am I an audiophile?  I meet the definition.  Am I music lover?  Meet that definition too but hopefully I'm more of a positive influence than negative. 

When do I get my chip?

I think everyone here is an audiophile. Whether your communication reveals your knowledge or your hubris has nothing to do with it. This is your personality. 

@mahgister 

Have you ever tried to factor in the cost of the time you spent perfecting your system in this equation?  How much would it cost someone to hire you to use your knowledge, patience and the sheer man-hour time to make their room acoustically nimble like yours? Maybe $50 an hour times 1000 hours?  In the USA we have a saying: time is money, think about it.  We all sacrificed for what we are passionate about. Money, time, relationship, there is a cost associated with it. $500 was just your initial investment, the real one is much more. 

You are right for sure!

It takes me almost 2 years non stop experiments because i am retired...

And it takes a dedicated room...

But i spoke here to the majority of people who think they listen DIRECTLY to their gear, like the RCA dog ,😁😊 oblivious of their room HUGE impact...

If i save the money throwing for only one dude, my posts will be useful, especially if you  already own costly gear to begin with and wanted to upgrade IGNORING like most people do, the powerful impact acoustic can made after crossing some line separating high end from ultra high end design  in particular...

Acoustic especially here is the key...

Nobody spoke so categorically about acoustic than me here, because for most people acoustic is ONLY THE ICING on the cake... In reality acoustic is the main recipe... Any basically good gear will do unbewknownst to most because of marketing electronical design consumerism and gear fetichism ... I dont say here that my vintage Sansui at 100 bucks rival the 6000 buck of the Berning zotl amplifier... I only say that acoustic is the geatest impactful factor in general and most of the times...nevermind the diffrence between my vintage Sansui and the improved ZOTL technology

My depest respect to you....

@mahgister

Have you ever tried to factor in the cost of the time you spent perfecting your system in this equation? How much would it cost someone to hire you to use your knowledge, patience and the sheer man-hour time to make their room acoustically nimble like yours? Maybe $50 an hour times 1000 hours? In the USA we have a saying: time is money, think about it. We all sacrificed for what we are passionate about. Money, time, relationship, there is a cost associated with it. $500 was just your initial investment, the real one is much more.

Not sure your assumption is really correct

it wasn‘t an assumption, it was something he actually stated himself, he was very pleased that his system had that characteristic

@pesky_wabbit

Will what can I say. The guy’s an idiot. 😁 and he's still could be considered audiophile 

 

Given the time I spend learning about gear and listening to music I better be. 

An audiophile is a person who has a reference sound for music that represents their most enjoyable listening and attempts to get as close to that reference when reproducing music electronically.  For me, the sound of acoustic instruments and human voice live is my reference. My goal is to come as close to reproducing that sound as possible with equipment I can afford to buy.

Others may have difference reference sounds. That is purely subjective.  The key for an audiophile is the quest for reproducing music that meets that reference.

If I hear a component on my system that makes a noticeable increase in the sound toward my reference, the question I ask is whether the cost of that component justifies the change it will make.  A $5,000 cartridge may make a significant difference in the sound, but is beyond what I am willing to spend to get that difference.