Sns, you bring up some interesting points. I know where you are coming from, but speaking as a professional musician, many of us fully realize that no sound reproduction equipment, not even the very best audiophile quality stuff, can equal the sound of live music. Much as I like the magazine, there really is no such thing as an "absolute sound." This is why many musicians do not bother to pay for really good reproduced sound. Do I agree with that? No, I would call myself an audiophile. I bought the best sounding system I could afford (the vast majority of us musicians are certainly not wealthy!), and I collect recordings that I love to listen to.
Also, as I mentioned in another thread, we have to do so much critical listening all the time on the job and in the practice room, or listening to recordings for study purposes, that sometimes we are just too tired to listen critically to equipment as well - we just want to come home, put something on (usually not what we were just playing) and enjoy the music. Again, I myself like to do this on equipment that sounds great, and that is a big part of the pleasure for me. But a great many musicians (and regular folks, of course) can get alot of pleasure out of listening to crap recordings on a crap system. If we couldn't also get pleasure out of music, and be able to turn off the critical listening, we would go insane.
Casey 33 hits the nail on the head in his post - ultimately, if you are listening to the equipment instead of the music, as way too many audiophiles do, you are seriously missing the boat.
Also, as I mentioned in another thread, we have to do so much critical listening all the time on the job and in the practice room, or listening to recordings for study purposes, that sometimes we are just too tired to listen critically to equipment as well - we just want to come home, put something on (usually not what we were just playing) and enjoy the music. Again, I myself like to do this on equipment that sounds great, and that is a big part of the pleasure for me. But a great many musicians (and regular folks, of course) can get alot of pleasure out of listening to crap recordings on a crap system. If we couldn't also get pleasure out of music, and be able to turn off the critical listening, we would go insane.
Casey 33 hits the nail on the head in his post - ultimately, if you are listening to the equipment instead of the music, as way too many audiophiles do, you are seriously missing the boat.