The Top Ten Reasons You're An Audiophile

Ойын-сауық

How did you become an audiophile? Steve lays out why you're one of us, the proud, the few audiophiles here on planet Earth!
If you still have doubts about whether you're an audiophile, watch this video. • You may not be an audi...
Steve African shirts were all bought from the Ashanti Fields Collection, www.etsy.com/shop/AshantiFields
My pal drummer Billy Drummond has appeared on the Audiophiliac Daily Show a number of times. • Billy’s back, taking a...
And www.billydrummonddrums.com/vi...
And this article, www.cnet.com/news/can-a-music...
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Пікірлер: 399

  • @DeAudiofilosyLocos
    @DeAudiofilosyLocos3 жыл бұрын

    The two things that really drew me where the expense and the inconvenience.

  • @JohnDoe-np3zk

    @JohnDoe-np3zk

    3 жыл бұрын

    How about the exercise of moving heavy speakers up and down stairs

  • @NickP333

    @NickP333

    3 жыл бұрын

    L O L !

  • @jownbey

    @jownbey

    3 жыл бұрын

    I confess i love cussing things till they work lol

  • @yuriwalter385

    @yuriwalter385

    3 жыл бұрын

    Lol

  • @irun2sanaxox

    @irun2sanaxox

    3 жыл бұрын

    John Doe why not get headphones? they can also do amazing stuff

  • @laurelhardy4064
    @laurelhardy40643 жыл бұрын

    Number 11, to see Steve's shirts every second day.

  • @user-eo6mw5jn1z

    @user-eo6mw5jn1z

    3 жыл бұрын

    we all know this is a show about shirts.

  • @PDCRed

    @PDCRed

    3 жыл бұрын

    Nothing else really matters 👍

  • @coolmickey68

    @coolmickey68

    3 жыл бұрын

    speaker grills made out of Steves shirts! now ya talkin

  • @yesacoustic

    @yesacoustic

    3 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely, goes without saying.👍😁

  • @Labor_Jones

    @Labor_Jones

    3 жыл бұрын

    lol

  • @horrortackleharry
    @horrortackleharry3 жыл бұрын

    No matter how much you might love a particular film, you're not going to rewatch it the amount of times you're going to listen to a favourite album. I'm an audiophile because the music never gets old and I want to hear it in the best way I can sensibly afford.

  • @fletchermunson6225
    @fletchermunson62253 жыл бұрын

    Your wife wants to go to a restaurant where they prepare the food in front of you. So, you take her to Subway. You might be an audiophile.

  • @jownbey
    @jownbey3 жыл бұрын

    I think the perfect statement was at the end. When you CARE about the music. Id rather have silence than the best song played over crap speakers.

  • @JosefTreiber

    @JosefTreiber

    3 жыл бұрын

    Good sound is nice, but if I had to choose between a crappy system with 1000 music albums and the best system ever with only 10 albums, I would choose the first.

  • @vaughntonkin539

    @vaughntonkin539

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@JosefTreiber auto-tune music sounds bad on any system, worst through PA horn speakers at the petrol station

  • @jahlion9969

    @jahlion9969

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@JosefTreiber Quantity rather than quality in music, interesting concept.

  • @jazz_addict7079

    @jazz_addict7079

    3 жыл бұрын

    With all due respect, that statement is "perfectly" BACKWARDS! If what you care about most is music, you will find a way to listen to it, no matter what, because there is an overarching need to engage with artistic expression in that form. Only someone whose primary concern is SOUND would make such a statement.

  • @jownbey

    @jownbey

    3 жыл бұрын

    @@jazz_addict7079 see man i just cant agree. if i were a musician and my song came thru dog turd bluetooth speakers id say hey, thats not the song, its not supposed to sound that way. its disrespectful to the artist to not hold up your end of the bargain. like if you were to go through the louvre with tinted glasses on, id call you a doofus.

  • @wayneday3116
    @wayneday31163 жыл бұрын

    I was clueless about audio until Christmas 1966 when I heard a tubed system (Dynaco?) in a college friend's dorm room. He was playing Handel's Messiah conducted by Sir Thomas Beecham on RCA. It was glorious!! He let me look at an Allied Radio catalog and I've been hooked ever since.

  • @55stevieray
    @55stevieray3 жыл бұрын

    Steve, you cracked me up when you said " I can play a turntable and a CD player well".

  • @GodfreyMann
    @GodfreyMann3 жыл бұрын

    Not really any of these, but no.9 is close - I definitely hate listening to music on bad sounding gear, but it never prompted me to become an audiophile. So what swayed me after 50 years was an idea.... ....an idea planted by YOU, Steve Gutenberg, in a video where you said something along the lines of "...wouldn't it be amazing to close your eyes and hear John Lennon singing to you like he's really in your room?" Now that's a goal worth chasing and the researching of technology within this quest is a means to an end (audio realism), not an end in itself. And from audio realism, I've developed a new/different relationship with music that's far more deep and enjoyable.

  • @ap6553

    @ap6553

    3 жыл бұрын

    Audio Realism is a great name for an audiophile

  • @dksculpture
    @dksculpture3 жыл бұрын

    “Fascinated by the technology.” Guilty as charged! ... but it goes beyond that. It’s about time travel and about creating the illusion of life itself.

  • @JohnDoe-np3zk

    @JohnDoe-np3zk

    3 жыл бұрын

    kzread.info/dash/bejne/iYh80a1-lJCtmtI.html

  • @MrWkendwarrior
    @MrWkendwarrior3 жыл бұрын

    Who needs caffeine when we have Steve's shirts to wake us up....love your shirts....loud and proud!

  • @AttyMonroe
    @AttyMonroe3 жыл бұрын

    Before I was an audiophile, I didn't know sound could get better than the earphones that came with my phone, then I found out it could; now I'm hooked.

  • @thomaslee6957
    @thomaslee69573 жыл бұрын

    Enjoying your show Steve. Keep them coming

  • @arkman8109
    @arkman81093 жыл бұрын

    I love the magic of tubes, capacitors and resistors put together in a certain order, making sound. The look and feel comes in second. Having old 50 and 60 year old equipment that sounds amazing.

  • @ob1keno227
    @ob1keno2273 жыл бұрын

    1. Music is my heroin 2. I'm stunned by technology (dacs, amps, speakers, storage...) and biology (ears in this case) 3. I enjoy shaping the sound (I equalize a lot)

  • @thhall459
    @thhall4593 жыл бұрын

    Amen, brother! Love your never-ending supply of audiophile education and entertainment!

  • @fletchermunson6225
    @fletchermunson62253 жыл бұрын

    I was broke, drove an old car, didn't have a girlfriend, wore funny clothes and my hygiene was intermittent. Someone looked at me and Said, "What are you, an audiophile?" Voila!"

  • @markswindler1431

    @markswindler1431

    3 жыл бұрын

    My sister used to say I was crazy to own a 12" black and white tv and a massive stereo. She claimed the whole house just "bounced up and down, and you can see it when you drive down the street!"

  • @jayf3562
    @jayf35623 жыл бұрын

    Hit the nail on the head Steve! I'm at least half of these. Had to chuckle at how accurate you were on so many!

  • @joeysarmiento1925
    @joeysarmiento19253 жыл бұрын

    With the advent of digital technology, the turntable still fascinates me especially if I clean the record and I noticed the big difference from before the cleaning. 😎🇵🇭❤️

  • @markswindler1431
    @markswindler14313 жыл бұрын

    I'm 65 years old now and I had a subscription to Stereo Review in 1971...I was in high school, and the first stereo I had was from Radio Shack...I would read Steve's reviews of various artists and bands and could only dream about what the album sounded like...My first album was "Sticky Fingers" by the Stones and I was hooked! I've been an audiophile my whole life, so a whole bunch of the 10 reasons apply directly to me! Steve, thanks for your KZread channel, and for helping a broke teenager to imagine a time when my stereo could be better(McIntosh, B&W), and I could afford to listen to those artists!

  • @user-xb4nn6ql5l
    @user-xb4nn6ql5l3 жыл бұрын

    Spot on. The piece of kit that converted me was the original Sony Walkman, which a summer camp counsellor played for me in a train on the way up the Matterhorn. I think I was 9 or 10. Up until then I’d loved the Sanyo portable cassette player my dad got me a couple of years earlier, along with a couple of cassettes. I had to have one. I saved pocket money for ever to get one. And then my first stereo receiver and cassette deck, using some speakers my parents donated from their stereo, which for some reason came with four speakers. And then... and then... and then...

  • @josepharchila1496

    @josepharchila1496

    3 жыл бұрын

    Yep the Sony Walkman put the bug in me too - will never forget hearing Jonny Mathis Christmas Song - such big spacious sound coming from tiny little headphones and handheld box! And it there it was just like Steve said - it jumped from my Dad to me.

  • @jeanmichaud1151
    @jeanmichaud11513 жыл бұрын

    All ten reasons are so true for me! Thanks Steve! For your video.

  • @drdiesel1
    @drdiesel13 жыл бұрын

    You might be an audiophile if every room in your house is packed with LPs and CDs! Please give us a tour of your collection in an upcoming episode!

  • @TorToroPorco
    @TorToroPorco3 жыл бұрын

    Like many people buying a stereo system was one of the first big purchases that I made when I began working. It was something I wanted to do even before I bought a car simply because a car was much more money and I didn’t need a car to get to work. But the real moment I became an audiophile was the moment that I experienced the magic of stereo imaging and the illusion of having someone perform in my room. My first system was pretty modest, perhaps not even very “audiophile” by some standards but that very quickly changed. That change occurred after I splurged for one of the first Sony CDP-101 CD players. It was rapidly followed by attending a seminar hosted by the Linn distributor and I experienced true high end reproduction for the first time.

  • @FelixtheMetalcat

    @FelixtheMetalcat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Great story and it mirrors how I thought when I was a teen. Am I sure I didn't write this comment.....? 🤣

  • @brainwb
    @brainwb3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks a lot Steve!! I a am from chile and i have to say, is very refreshing listen to you. Cheers from Santiago de chile and thanks again!!

  • @Grooverski
    @Grooverski3 жыл бұрын

    You become an audiophile after experiencing music on gear that gave you goosebumps for the very fist time. And now, you want to recreate that same experience. Once you get it, you get used to it and chase begins all over again. It’s a drug for sure.

  • @kvrhifi

    @kvrhifi

    3 жыл бұрын

    💯 True . It Dangerous than drug. The first goosebumps experience will become normal after some time . And then we want higher level goosebumps and eventually it will become normal after some time .. again we will look for even next level goosebumps... again so no matter how much we spent.. that thing going to normal.. never ending story unless we broke and distracted by other issues

  • @Grooverski

    @Grooverski

    3 жыл бұрын

    KVR Listening Room And I believe that most (advanced) audiophiles never stop looking for that “holy grail” within their realistic budget. Budget that usually is exceeded by multiple times. There’s also this unspoken rivalry among fellow audiophiles trying to outdo each other, and prove their approach to reaching “Audio Nirvana” as superior. Yes, we are interesting bunch of individuals. 😂 At the end, it’s an enjoyable hobby that seems to be pushing industry to do better. Steven mentioned audiophiles driven by new technologies. And that might be true for individuals driven by latest and greatest in digital domain such as DACs or streamers (maybe class D amplification advancement to some degree) but I believe that more seasoned audiophiles pride themselves with purist approach based on old school topologies. It’s not to say that they are stocked in Thomas Edison era as they do appreciate latest technologies just like everybody else. But I doubt that they’re driven by it. Also, this notion of “music loving” driven audiophiles is a bit naive. We all love music. It’s a human nature. We, the audiophiles, just want it to sound best. And we don’t mind witnessing a casual listener of our carefully put together rig to be mesmerize by music they know but never really heard for the first time. 👍 This is my honest description of an audiophile. And I’m guilty of all of it. Lol

  • @simonlai
    @simonlai3 жыл бұрын

    All your 10 reasons sound good, tks Steve!

  • @magneticcinema
    @magneticcinema3 жыл бұрын

    PERFECT top 10 list!!!

  • @progressiveguy9959
    @progressiveguy99593 жыл бұрын

    I read Stereo Review.

  • @jamesgilgannon4164
    @jamesgilgannon41643 жыл бұрын

    Absolutely Steve. 100% for me. You nailed it!👍😊

  • @darthdurkelthewise320
    @darthdurkelthewise3203 жыл бұрын

    Because we watch this channel regularly. That’s a reason right there!

  • @brucemitchell5092
    @brucemitchell50923 жыл бұрын

    Another wonderful take on this crazy hobby. Yeah, I’m guilty on about 7 counts. High Fidelity and Stereo Review- yup. Absolute Sound - read the first issues in my college library around 1978. What really amazes me now is “How can vinyl and CDs store the spatial cues that a system retrieved to recreate the space of a recording venue through sound staging and imaging?” Even in mono, to listen to Bruno Walter conducting Mahler’s 9th 2 months before the Anschluss, and get some feeling of being in that hall. It really is an awesome thing.

  • @paulmosquera7199
    @paulmosquera71993 жыл бұрын

    Number 5 here!!! Great video Steve

  • @pranasvaicaitis42
    @pranasvaicaitis423 жыл бұрын

    Well, thank you - you helped me to understand I am a bit crazy about music, gear and vinyl magic.

  • @aramb
    @aramb3 жыл бұрын

    Spot on, on so many counts. A HS friend's dad had a dedicated listening room, with an amazing system. He shuttled us to audio shows in Manhattan, in the days of quadraphonic sound. Remember quadraphonic sound in the 1970s? Those were fun times :-)

  • @edthefirst2859

    @edthefirst2859

    3 жыл бұрын

    Ron Hoffmann there was a showroom in Manhattan in 1970, 71 that had great speakers and would demo Quadraphonic sound.

  • @jacekkowalczyk9408
    @jacekkowalczyk94083 жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve, You convinced me, I'm an audiophile. Thanks and regards

  • @pala23mj
    @pala23mj3 жыл бұрын

    I have dreams about audio equipment and music! My wife from time to time is like honey do you ever talk about anything else?? Who are we kidding.....HONEY DO YOU EVER THINK ABOUT ANYTHING ELSE! My system is on all the time!! I am constantly wanting to upgrade until I find what I am looking for!! That being said I had the pleasure to audition EAR 868 PRE and boy oh boy I THINK I FOUND WHAT I AM LOOKING FOR .... THAT SOUND I WANT..... I THOUGHT I WOULD NEVER FIND IT!! I may splurge and pick up the EAR 912. Anyone have the pleasure to try any of the above mentioned. WE ARE ALL NERDS.... BUT NERDS ARE COOL.

  • @i1pro
    @i1pro3 жыл бұрын

    *Reason# 11 you get to watch the audiophiliac fashion forward shirts.* Lol jokes aside I love this channel! 80% of my purchases were recommended by this channel. I regret the other 20%...

  • @SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac
    @SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac3 жыл бұрын

    Fourth

  • @progressiveguy9959

    @progressiveguy9959

    3 жыл бұрын

    LOL

  • @arte2arquiteto

    @arte2arquiteto

    3 жыл бұрын

    Firth Of Fifth (Selling England by the Pound) ~Genesis~ c.1973

  • @NickP333

    @NickP333

    3 жыл бұрын

    Haha!

  • @QoraxAudio

    @QoraxAudio

    3 жыл бұрын

    Haha meme'd the meme! Epic 😎

  • @scottyo64

    @scottyo64

    3 жыл бұрын

    Love it!

  • @SrenNielsenMadklub
    @SrenNielsenMadklub3 жыл бұрын

    Spot on!

  • @spunkthecombo
    @spunkthecombo3 жыл бұрын

    Spot On!

  • @StewartMarkley
    @StewartMarkley3 жыл бұрын

    For me, it started a very long time ago in the early 60s when the "Hi-Fi"s I heard all had lousy or no real bass response. Then when I put my little 8 inch two way open backed speakers in the doorway of my bedroom closet and suddenly I had bass I had to learn why. These days it's about the science behind recording and reproducing music and really enjoying music.

  • @cerealgriego
    @cerealgriego3 жыл бұрын

    Great video, Steve! Could you make one about analog and digital sourced vinyl? Many people argue about whether it makes sense to listen to vinyl with digital mastering or digital sources. Thank you very much, greetings from Colombia!

  • @hobo1452
    @hobo14523 жыл бұрын

    #6 really got me. When I was a kid back before transistors, my mother went on and on about my uncle who built his own tube amplifier. I remember hearing it and even though I didn't know good from bad, it stuck in my head. I have been in love with all things audio since those days, and I just recently realized a dream from that time by buying my first tube amp. The best part? No buyer's remorse!!

  • @michaelriner1181
    @michaelriner11813 жыл бұрын

    I love the process of investigating music and artists new to me.It is exciting that there is so much out there to enjoy ,both past and present. Its the same with gear to an extent, always looking for what might enhance the listening experience that is affordable for me. So the hunt is never over, that`s what makes it fun.

  • @stimpy1226
    @stimpy12263 жыл бұрын

    Keith Jarrett was and probably still is a giant audiophile who sent letters to the editor of absolute sound.

  • @michaelhead4387
    @michaelhead43873 жыл бұрын

    Right on the money here. All of these. I love the gear. The music. I was a musician(bassist)for many many years. I care about the visual as well. I was introduced to "separates," as a young child and was blown away. Hearing Rush, and Deep Purple, on my uncle's system was life changing. I love technology, the cables, the cartridge and stylus reading grooves in a piece of vinyl, the warmth, or coldness of an amp developed and perfected, speaker size, type etc., started collecting vinyl as a kindergartner, worked in a music store for many years, and though Ive scaled down my collection of course over the years, I definitely had many many cds and records in my collection. I love it. Yup, this video nailed it.

  • @t60fallout9
    @t60fallout93 жыл бұрын

    Reason 11 Steve Guttemberg

  • @hippydippy
    @hippydippy3 жыл бұрын

    Holy Shit! Eye Spied an old "Voice of the Music" amp in one of those pictures. That's what I grew up listening to in the 60's! Along with a pair of sweet Electro-Voice wall hanging speakers (my Dad sold TV's & Stereo's) so we always had a nice system in the house. BTW... That shirt is TOTALLY BAD ASS!!!

  • @johnholmes125
    @johnholmes1253 жыл бұрын

    For me my journey into music started when I was 10 years old I’m now 48, but it all started with a single Ferguson cassette player with a mono speaker and at the time I desperately wanted a stereo player but back in the day times were hard so I came across a din cable which allowed me to plug the cassette player into my mum’s record player which allowed sound from 2 speakers. And that was the start for me it so slowly over the years I have built up my setup to where I am now and can say I’m happy with my current setup..

  • @DavidGilden
    @DavidGilden3 жыл бұрын

    Great Shirt!

  • @waynemackie3113
    @waynemackie31133 жыл бұрын

    I love this video, it stirs all the deep meanings within my soul that makes me keep pursuing better sound. I cannot afford any of the really high end stuff I just keep looking out every day for some bargain. I love to try and fix things that aren't working and see if I can find that 'sound' out of it. I keep ending up with things that don't quite meet my requirements but I always pass them on to friends that have never been exposed to a decent sound system. I believe the the karma of passing on the gift of music will always return me another bargain on ebay/marketplace. My next project is to build my own speakers from scratch, its probably my most expensive project yet that has me thinking 'hey I could actually afford something that you have recommended'. However I am determined to try some of my own ideas of how to make that sound and if those ideas dont work, I want to see if I can improve the design with more time and effort.

  • @garygray9223
    @garygray92233 жыл бұрын

    Good stuff, always about the music and the emotional connection for me. I have built piece by piece the best sounding digital and analogue systems I have ever owned. Each piece the result of ridiculous amount of research as well as trial and error. Not crazy money but just right for my ears. Prefer term music lover but Audiophile is fine also. I like the diversity of your channel, you are no one trick pony. Peace

  • @johannestitz5797
    @johannestitz57973 жыл бұрын

    Number 11: You avoid listening to high quality recordings, your absolute favourite songs and your special audio-test-tracks on low quality gear like in-ear headphones or car hifi because you just cant appreciate them when they are not played on your system. Such a song for me is `justice groove‘ by Stanley Clarke. My friends for example know that i like this song because i played it countles times at home. So on a few occasions when they pick me up or we meet at their place they play it for me but i prefere to skip it and rather listen to their songs and genres that they are into. Otherwise i would just feel the need to get home and listen to it on my system because i really cant help myself... It just sounds better

  • @FelixtheMetalcat

    @FelixtheMetalcat

    3 жыл бұрын

    Well I would argue there is nothing wrong with car hifi if you build it with the same purpose as a home system. That's what I did and even though the 2 are different, my car stereo is on par with the home system. Happy listening!

  • @joeolejar
    @joeolejar3 жыл бұрын

    I was introduced to high end audio gear by a friend who had Klipsch corner horns, Crown DC electronics and a Bang and Olafsen linear tracking turntable. I brought a 45 rpm direct to disk recording of the Emperor Concerto to audition. I was hooked.

  • @mpp9964
    @mpp99643 жыл бұрын

    Can’t say as though I would have changed much with that list. Rings pretty true. It’s always nice to be understood,

  • @edd2771
    @edd27713 жыл бұрын

    I had the bug early ...my sisters were older so I heard the Beatles in-utero. I vividly remember dropping the needle on our cheap record player at about age 7 and hearing “One Two Three FAAW!!!” as I saw Her Standing There kicked in and it was game over. Fast forward to my teens and my dad had a small retail shop across the street from a high end audio place in the 70s. I would drop by on my lunch hour and they would be as eager to demo new equipment as I was to hear it. So I learned at a very young age what quality was. I saved months of wages to buy demos and floor models of some amazing stuff that I still use, and which I will submit as a photo the next time you call for it. Great channel.

  • @jfbaquero
    @jfbaquero3 жыл бұрын

    Dear Steve, you just nailed it! Great! Number 6 oh yeah.

  • @pabloconde8590
    @pabloconde85903 жыл бұрын

    The most common sense I heard un my 68' life. From Spain, regards!! Pablo.

  • @wazuo8354
    @wazuo83543 жыл бұрын

    Did you miss something ? no you're spot on, thanks, great video !!

  • @mrfarnz
    @mrfarnz3 жыл бұрын

    Well chosen list of ten Steve, hits all the high points. I have been enjoying your video format very much. Started in the audio business in 1971 @ Bill Colbert's Audio Exchange. OFF TOPIC: The painting of the lady that often shows on your videos, would that be by artist Phillip Pearlstein? Certainly looks like his style, had him as a teacher in college. Keep up the good work, much appreciated. Be well, Joe G.

  • @realleescoggins
    @realleescoggins3 жыл бұрын

    Love the shirt by the way...

  • @robertocastro4403
    @robertocastro44033 жыл бұрын

    Becoming a teenager in the early 70s, there was so much amazing music being produced that we couldn't keep up with. With my friends from the neighborhood we were going from home to home to listen a new record and make tapes, so each one can have it at home. It was the time when we discovered all these world of music and bands. We were amazed with all those new Japanese stereo systems full of knobs and switches, the standard hi tech stuff in any living room by that time, capable of reproduce all that incredible sound. It was a great time! So there you have it! Number 10, 9, 7, 6, 3, 2 and 1

  • @robmills537
    @robmills5373 жыл бұрын

    Hi Steve great video man and so many of them were correct.

  • @bjrichardson6059
    @bjrichardson60593 жыл бұрын

    Thanks for doing this - I hit almost all of these! But never did consider myself an audiophile, as I thought of it as some "elevated" status. But you took the exclusivity out of it, so thanks. I started in high school with hooking up different friends' speakers for comparison. I can add that I have done sound for a couple of my friends' local bands, and been very exacting on getting it right. More evidence! And thanks for your budget recommendations - I have gotten 2 Dayton Air/Lepai setups and one Andrew Jones Pioneer. I find the Daytons more tiring to listen to. The Pioneers are smoother, at least with compressed audio (didn't hook up turntable yet), and better bass response in spite of what looks like a smaller woofer.

  • @kevinw.weiser9820
    @kevinw.weiser98203 жыл бұрын

    Is that Decware I see in the background? There's a lucky dog! Hope to have some soon. Rock on!

  • @burgerbarn5000
    @burgerbarn50003 жыл бұрын

    You're an Audiophile if you have a Pass Labs HP amp clinging for its life halfway on a stool.

  • @carlitomelon4610

    @carlitomelon4610

    3 жыл бұрын

    Oh you said rack...I heard wreck!

  • @Labor_Jones
    @Labor_Jones3 жыл бұрын

    before I was 20 I had about 5,000 albums. I still have about 5,000 recollected on HD. Yet, I never listened much for nearly 30 years because I was making music. About 2 years ago I realized something was wrong and I would right it if I could. Which is Why I am Here looking for ideas although most of what I'm rebuilding is between 50 - 65 years old. I must be nuts.

  • @galessi1226

    @galessi1226

    3 жыл бұрын

    I am still trying to re create how my lp' s sounded to me on my first nice 1500 dollar system in 1975........but i just realized...i might only have 10 or 15 years left of decent hearing!!!

  • @Labor_Jones

    @Labor_Jones

    3 жыл бұрын

    ​@@galessi1226 I sort of understand, but I think I'm trying to get that and something more. My Music Equipment (what I have/had) was never bad equipment and I did sound at events in a few counties when I wasn't performing, but it wasn't exactly the same & I did one worse in converting most of my Analog into a variety of digital. I suppose that is why I've chosen TUBE from the pre-A-B Amps that I grew up on like you so that the pathway of the sound is closer to the science of those time. And while the cost of reproduction of good equipment 'today' is cheaper, so too is the sound I think more like a child's turntable with Picture Records entertaining and good introduction to the ART of music to a child.Today most of the equipment today seems geared to that age group who never go beyond watching big Breast and Low Skirts in a video with '1,000's of extras and think that is called Music Art. I recently saw the Interview with (Klips) head designer in a 2 part with Steve, and I agree that what some of the better Music Equipment Designers are ARTIST who search for the magic of recreating an invisible art form. anyway.... when I was overseas after I was drafted I bought a ton of gear that my mother stored outside and most of it vandalized before my 'honorable' discharge... Luckily equipment was cheap and I had a 2nd system I sent not knowing the 1st had disappeared and was back at home when the 2nd pile arrived. .... I guess what I'm saying is $1,500 bucks could buy you a 'hell of a system' back then.

  • @normanbott
    @normanbott3 жыл бұрын

    8 out of 10 for me - I'm not a musician and I wasn't introduced by hearing systems.T university we had to give a 15 minute presentation on something and I chose audio reproduction from vinyl (before digital). I got best in group for my passion with the subject. I never gets old. Best set of reasons I've seen Steve.

  • @jdrissel
    @jdrissel3 жыл бұрын

    I knew before I was 6 that I was an audiophile. I was good enough at it that my dad let me diagnose what was wrong with his Scott tube receiver that failed in a move. I swapped tubes and paid attention to which tube didn't cause a new failure when removed or didn't fix something when put in. I found 2 dead tubes and replacing them fixed it. From then on I was allowed to use his system. At about 6 years old, I heard a system in a mall and knew it was something special. When I finally dragged my father there I found a system that was phenomenal. I was also told later it cost more than our house!

  • @Music2Die4
    @Music2Die43 жыл бұрын

    #6 is the most important one for people to become an audiophile...... (I got the bug from a record store that had a really nice system..... And hearing familiar music with so much more information than how I hear it aired on the radio.) Having such an experience was a lot more common back in the 1960s and 1970s than it is today.

  • @FelixtheMetalcat
    @FelixtheMetalcat3 жыл бұрын

    Guilty on 9 of 10 charges....and boy do I LOVE TO SEE my physical collection going back to my pre-teen years...😎 Certainly enjoyed reading Steve's articles in Stereo Review waaaay back when....

  • @realleescoggins
    @realleescoggins3 жыл бұрын

    Nailed it Steve.

  • @IDann1
    @IDann13 жыл бұрын

    For the last 36 years I never thought I was an audiophile, just a music lover ,but it looks like I am in some way, as I have a simple B&W and Marantz system..but I’ve long lost all my vinyl..just mp3 and streaming now.

  • @jari2018

    @jari2018

    3 жыл бұрын

    Only Ogg at 440 kpbs gives CD-like quality and ogg att around 200-210 kpbs is acceptble for the ear ( voice and room ). ( 320k mp3 and mp3 vbr is accetpble ) 224k is not and same with 224k in mp4 format -both has losses in the woman voice department and and in the end cd and mp3 make me tired of listeneng to the music not so vinyl

  • @woodstock480
    @woodstock4803 жыл бұрын

    It was cool to see some of the gear in the background. Not sure if any are yours or if they're all for review, but it'd be cool to get a room tour of your own gear.

  • @Leicaphile27
    @Leicaphile273 жыл бұрын

    Bring music to life = Audiophile 4Life...can't go back to mediocre (normal, regular) sound. Love the gear, and love that DECWARE in the background!

  • @bigblueocean
    @bigblueocean3 жыл бұрын

    I've never denied it!

  • @MrPhins
    @MrPhins3 жыл бұрын

    Man, can I relate to #5 (frustrated musician). I grew up with a friend who was a drumming prodigy and all his brothers were in a band. The first time I saw a Fender Stratocaster leaning against a Marshall stack I was hooked on the gear. Unfortunately, despite his best efforts, I was inept at best. But, I was able to obtain audio gear and ended up hosting a morning radio show for years. I couldn't be a musician but you just nailed when my audiophile quest began...and I didn't even know.

  • @JosefTreiber
    @JosefTreiber3 жыл бұрын

    I was 13 when I came into buying records or lending them from friends. We had a record player with an integrated mono speaker. Then I was at the home of a friend, his parents had a stereo system, which I was not aware of until he started to play a record. I remember it was Queen - The Game. It was the first seconds of the first song on the record when I heard what stereo can do compared to mono, and I have been an audiophile since then.

  • @jonathansturm4163
    @jonathansturm41633 жыл бұрын

    I must confess that I too am a failed musician. I tried guitar, harmonica and cornet, and nobody could stand listening to my efforts, least of all me. Like Steve I hung out with musicians, several are/were quite famous. Needless to say when first introduced I was asked: “And what do you play?” My response was : “Records!” I wasn’t completely useless of course. I could carry amps and speaker cabinets and tune a guitar quicker than most.

  • @jonathansturm4163

    @jonathansturm4163

    3 жыл бұрын

    Thanks Steve. I also derived immense pleasure from sharing my music and love of music as a broadcaster back in the 1980s. I’d give my eye teeth to listen to you sharing your music as a broadcaster; our tastes show considerable overlap.

  • @humanitech
    @humanitech3 жыл бұрын

    I guess an early appreciation of music and also being into playing the guitar were the primary motives. But the actual realisation of hifi came about through my sisters then boyfriend and all his friends... who all had a great but modest hi-fi systems of the day... They were all into motorbikes, sex, drugs and music and I was 15 at the time and by 16 had my first little system. That was 40 years ago, but the journey's has been fun and music has always been a friend and a pleasure.

  • @bshah4831
    @bshah48313 жыл бұрын

    Number 6 is how I started. My neighbour had a great hifi and worked in a hifi shop, we're talking about 1976! Bought a Dual based T/T from the hifi shop that my neighbour worked in. After that it was magazines that kept me informed.

  • @bc527c
    @bc527c3 жыл бұрын

    great shirt

  • @user-od9iz9cv1w
    @user-od9iz9cv1w3 жыл бұрын

    Nailed it. All but #4 resonate. I am not a musician. But the rest strongly describe me and I describe myself as an audiophile. As a DIYAUDIO enthusiast, it is also a fun hobby. Electronics, metal working and woodworking.

  • @carlitomelon4610
    @carlitomelon46103 жыл бұрын

    "IT'S ALIVE!!!!" Yep, that's it;-) All 10 apply to me. I love to recreate a Musical event at home just for me and a friend/my wife. Where can you go to listen to music without disturbance, kick your feet up and really listen with your feet up with a mug of tea to sip on? Live? Not any more. It's fun, but Remember the crowd noise? Being an audiophile is a purist pursuit. If you can stop obsessing about the gear and engage your imagination 😊

  • @gtodave6768
    @gtodave67683 жыл бұрын

    So I get the LOVE of music from my mother. (Who I miss dearly). She in her wisdom exposed my sister and I to all types of music. Classical, Jazz, R&B, Movie sound tracks, rock, Gospel, we even had Sesame Street albums lol. And she played all of those different music Genres on a little table top system comprised of a turntable and two little speakers by a now defuncted company called "Symphony". I got my love of actual audio equipment from my Uncle who owned four massive JBL speakers and a large rack of Pioneer, Fisher & SAE amps etc. I loved going to his house even though we had to walk by the JBL's sideways . But the music sounded so much more alive and "Live' at his place. I was so influenced by my mother and Uncle that while my buddies were playing basketball I was at "8th Ave electronics", "J&R Music World", Sam Goody, and yes........even " Sound by Singer" listening to albums and stereo set ups. So here we are today ...some 50 plus years later and I am a proud audiophile!!! Not at all ashamed of that designation in the least. I even listen to some of the same albums that I listened to as a kid with my mother. And my first pair of speakers were of course JBL's. So family influence has made the music and gear lover that I am today. I wouldn't have it any other way!! To all my fellow Audiophiles good health to you and happy listening!!!

  • @brydon10
    @brydon103 жыл бұрын

    I think it was my Uncle who got me into speakers way back when. He had some Cerwin Vegas (which were actually my Dad's before his) and I remember us playing some Beastie Boys (their first album) on them to test out the bass.

  • @golfing22002
    @golfing220023 жыл бұрын

    Had a question for you, what do you think about paiiring Emotiva's former reference two channel amp, the XPR-2 with the Martin Logan Motion 60 XTI's? also, because this set up with also be used for Home Theater, it will be hooked up with Onkyo's former Flagship receiver, the Onkyo NR5007. Will having it hooked up to the Onky receiver affect the music quality of the system? Thanks in advance for your help.

  • @ralphmilburn6245
    @ralphmilburn62453 жыл бұрын

    No. 6 my friends dad's system. About 1965. I never heard it but I had never seen anything like it before. It was setup in the living room.

  • @scottdavis0801
    @scottdavis08013 жыл бұрын

    I saw an old HK 330b at a music store and matched them with some EPI M100s. After that experience, i was fully hooked. It started with trying to get better records/LPs, and slowly turned into an audio hobby!

  • @analogaudiorules1724

    @analogaudiorules1724

    3 жыл бұрын

    mann, i wish epi still made speakers...

  • @lesmatthews459
    @lesmatthews4593 жыл бұрын

    Oh crap!! Never thought of it - but 10 out of 10!! LOL!!

  • @mondoenterprises6710
    @mondoenterprises67103 жыл бұрын

    For me it started with the joy of the hunt of collecting music at record/ cd stores. Then learning about music and musicians. Then making my own tapes and cds. It all sounded good to me on a fairly crap system b/c I didn't know any better. Then late in life I learned that if I got a little better equipment all this music I enjoy would sound a lot better. If they asked me on my deathbed what I most enjoyed in life, the hunt for and listening to good music would be high on the list.

  • @1mctous
    @1mctous3 жыл бұрын

    #4 for me, connecting with musicians past and present.

  • @rickym.5271
    @rickym.52713 жыл бұрын

    Electronics has always amazed me. The foundation of harnessing subatomic particles and beyond.

  • @captainfallsalotatppic2508
    @captainfallsalotatppic25083 жыл бұрын

    Steve, I love your shirt, I totally would rock that shirt infact right after I finish writing my comment, I will go shopping and see other shirts the maker has to offer. Anywho, I am a music lover audiophile. I just started collecting 33s. In fact, my first vinyl that I purchased, I also purchased a Audio-Technia DD turntable and a nice set of shelf speaters last Jan. I now have over 50 albums. I also own a few hundred cassette tapes. My cassettes, I started purchasing when I was 10 - 11 years of age, Some I purchase in single, Most are whole albume. I still have those cassettes and I'm in my early-mid 40's now. So, I have tapes that are 30 years old. Actually, I purchased Whitney Houston's second titled albume " I Wanna Dance with Somebody, (Who Loves Me)" 6.2.1987 33 years and some months old and I still play it and it still sounds almost the same as the day I got it.

  • @praxis22
    @praxis223 жыл бұрын

    I did inherit my dad's turntable, a Garrard 301with an Eddy current break,a strobe, and an understanding of what the knobles on the edge of the platter do. At the right strobe and speed, it stops moving so you know you're at the right speed. Allied to a SME 5001 arm, my brother got the Leak tube amp. Though I did retune his speakers. Goodman's Mezo 3's changed the bass reflex port. Removed the dead tweeter and squawker. Replaced it with a peizoelectronic tweeter that ran from 3k to 20k leaving me with a 2k hole. Then I bought my own system. Before my headphones and IEM obsession hit late in life.

  • @valicu2000
    @valicu20003 жыл бұрын

    For me the magic started when I bought my first aftermarket power cable ... Zavfino Legion. I hooked it to the power amp (getting rid of the stock cord) and I was blown away: more bass, larger scene, smoother highs. Wow! I was listening to lies, dull things ... how far can I go from now on? The music should sound different than I thought initially ...

  • @louisperlman8030
    @louisperlman80303 жыл бұрын

    For me, it was #3, the hardware. When I was a senior in high school, my father asked me to research HiFi. He never bought it, something about needing the money for college tuition (this was when a family with a half decent income could actually afford college tuition without going into debt), so I eventually bought my own Tech HiFi starter system. They had a deal where they gave 100% trade in on speakers at least twice the price within a year, and I was on the upgrade merry go round for many years. I only owned a handful of records when I started out.

  • @PDCRed
    @PDCRed3 жыл бұрын

    As with almost everything in life, if you spend 3-6 hours a day doing it, it's worth spending your money on.

  • @leemccurtayne9489
    @leemccurtayne94893 жыл бұрын

    Well Doctor, the journey has been a long one and it started when the term Hi Fi was described. The capability to hear as much as “Economically “ possible from music sources to the brain. That incredible effort of laying down all the intricacies of the engineer and mastering, and then hear them back at home. Discovering and experiencing what the audio terms actually were, like staging, air, Timbres etc, all expose you to what is there in the recording you “Paid” for. When you stand next to violinist and “feeling” that violin reverberate, you long to hear that in your equipment. If you don’t get that, well the search starts and maybe never finishes, until you lose your hearing, maybe.

  • @thetechq
    @thetechq3 жыл бұрын

    Sound guy. Sound person. I sit in the back and make your show or service sound good. :)

  • @xiongallen3320

    @xiongallen3320

    3 жыл бұрын

    Hello I want you to hear that charming voice,come on my home page

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