I was a poor audiophile in my 20s and 30s. Pretty much coasted for 35 years and taken up the addiction for the last 5 years or so. The one constant is the music. And struggling with a buzzing cable in my home office. The music brings back fond memories and soothes my nerves at night. Much healthier than watching cable news.
I lately wonder why I’m an Audiophile.
Ever since I lately stopped obsessing over sound quality and started really listening to music I’m wondering why fidelity was so important to my appreciation. Not that I’m totally on the wagon. I still revel in hearing wonderful sound. It’s just not so all-important anymore. And, sometimes very poorly recorded recordings do turn me off.
It’s just freeing not being so obsessed.
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Members over the course of the past year have alluded to this state of listening which mirrors aspects of meditation - acknowledging and letting go of passing thoughts and observations, staying within the moment and focusing on one thing at a time (breath, music, gardening, exercise, whatever it may be). One could successfully argue that there's similarities and overlap between these approaches - meditative state vs critical listening. But the key difference which was mentioned is "simply acknowledging these sound variables rather than evaluating and analyzing [which] is key to a relaxed state of listening." Personally, I've found posts like this of value and somewhat validating; maybe I'm not alone in my approach. So +1 @sns even if I took your statement further into the stands in left field. Listening can be more than just listening for both the audiophile and general listener.
@boxcarman +1: I've experienced this as well and something that I've become very conscious of over the years. Striking a healthy balance with other activities helps promote greater levels of gratitude when relaxing with the audio system. For myself, gardening and landscaping has been my counterbalance. |
@rvpiano I finally understand where you're coming from! I don't believe you should distance yourself from being an audiophile, rather you should consider yourself a happy audiophile.
I also understand why some feel the need to distance themselves from this hobby/obsession. In our family business I regularly encounter a couple individuals who've interacted with audiophiles in their line of work. One was a former salesperson at one the the local high end audio dealers (now a custom woodworker), this guy absolutely detests audiophiles, he perceives them as angst ridden, insecure, obsessed, absolutely anal in their audiophile quest. He's happy with what many of us would consider just above mid fi system. The other individual is a musician that works for a local custom room treatment manufacturer (we help in the manufacturer of these treatments). He simply doesn't get the whole obsession with chasing down the last iota of performance- from a home system, this both audio and home theater installations, again he perceives them as angst ridden people fixated on concerns he'd never have. He gets his audio and music 'fix' from performing live music for an audience.
Point in all this, based on outside, and 'inside' perspectives audiophilia often seen as an affliction rather than something enjoyable. Doesn't have to be this way, I've seen both happy and angst ridden audiophiles in my lifetime, contentedness comes from within when one learns to allow it. |
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