Audiophiles and De-cluttering -- your journey toward both psychic and sonic improvement


Every audiophile knows that we want more signal and less noise. We seek it in our systems and our rooms. We want the power, elegance, and simplicity needed to produce immersive listening.

I'm now at the point where I want less -- fewer options, less clutter, more openness. And that means re-considering assumptions about audio.

For me, this is going to start with power cords. I simply don't hear much difference from the special cords I got and they're awkward to use. I'm thinking of beginning my de-cluttering path with them. Next, the back up equipment -- older DAC's, extra speaker cables, etc. And, most controversially, I expect to get rid of my home theater speakers in lieu of a high-performance soundbar.

Anyway, those are just my ideas.

What have YOU done to de-clutter your audio life?

What did you give up and how did it help or hurt your pursuit of audio satisfaction?

Did peace of mind make listening more enjoyable? 

For what it's worth, here's are some excerpts from a recent article on decluttering from the NYT. I found it helpful.

Ms. Yamashita and Ms. Kondo approach decluttering in different ways. In Ms. Kondo’s books and Netflix series, she offers easy-to-follow techniques for organizing, wrapped in her signature cheer and positivity. Keep items that make you happy and thank those that do not before tossing them away, she instructs.

Ms. Yamashita is more abstract, philosophical and probing — less approachable, converts of the Marie Kondo school argue. When sorting through what to keep or toss away, Ms. Yamashita pushes her clients to think about why they are attached to certain items, and to examine what overabundance and obsession do to their emotional states.

“For me, danshari is not about tidying up, organizing or tossing away things that don’t spark joy,” Ms. Yamashita said, slurping soba noodles out of sesame broth at a restaurant in Tokyo. “It is about returning people to a state in which parting with things feels natural.”

“When people’s homes and minds get clogged up with too many things, they begin to fester,” she continued. “It’s like how you eat and then release — it is a normal part of our existence.”

“Danshari is about creating an exit and getting that flow back,” she added.

From a session with a client:

“You’re noticing there are too many things out in the open, but we need to probe deeper into the fact that you have so much stuff,” Ms. Yamashita said midway through their cleaning.

“I think my mind is cluttered,” Ms. Kojima replied, from work and elsewhere. “I have so many things constantly being jammed into my head,” she said.

Ms. Yamashita pressed: “Obviously, no one can see inside your head, but it’s visible, in this space.” She then gestured at the living room. “Can you see how the challenges you’re dealing with in your head are physically manifested here?” she asked.

“I think the problem is that I can’t even recognize when there’s too much,” Ms. Kojima said.

SOURCE: https://www.nytimes.com/2025/01/16/business/hideko-yamashita-decluttering-danshari.html
 

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@devinplombier 

Speakers reproduce sound.

They either do it well or they don't.

I have both a HT setup and a two channel setup in my condo and both work fabulously because of the HT bypass setup.

The only thing they share are the two main speakers. I have 5 subwoofers. One for the HT and four in a distributed bass array which handles the low frequencies under 80dB. 

I would be interested if you explain what specific attributes make a good home theatre speaker, as opposed to a good two channel speaker. The only attribute I can think of is perhaps using a ported sub for the HT, but maybe you know something I don't.

I moved from a 7.2 home theater System in my man cave I didn’t use much to a music only system.  It started simple but I’ve moved to separate components so I have more equipment but I’m using it and enjoying it.  In the family rooms the family didn’t like the loudness of my surround sound setup and they wanted it to be easy to use.  I got rid of the old systems and went to Sonos Beam 2 soundbars each with a minisub.  They sounded better to me than the Bose and Samsung bars I tried.  The family is happy and I can live with the sound watching TV and movies and occasionally streaming music.  It’s also great to control the music in 4 different rooms from the app (yes it had issues but never my TV sound). I appreciate the simplicity and ease of use.  When I want critical listening or to crank up my music I’ve got my listening room.  

To me, the ideal speakers for home theatre would be three identical speakers for fronts and center. Not real practical if your mains are towers. 

My center channel isn't the same model or brand, but it actually blends well tonally with my mains.  I've had center channel speakers that didn't blend well and it was quite noticeable.

Being able to do HT with my system in no way compromises two channel.  The compromises were made on the HT side because it's a lower priority. 

@Carlsbad2 - I'd love to know more about your experience with the Cinema 40 and its operating quirks if any. I am considering this as an option for one location as we rebuild from last April's fire. The price is relatively affordable and in today's receiver landscape, if it operates smoothly and with no quirky behavior, it could be classified as a bargain if it holds up sonically. Since it supports external amplification via preamp outputs I could consider that as a foundation for a very solid long term system. But without getting the nitty gritty info on what it is actually like to live with, I am slow to jump in with both feet. Would very much appreciate your insights

@devinplombier I wonder if you could expand on your post concerning the suitability of full range music speakers for home theater and why a good music speaker is NOT good for HT. Please understand, I am not being contentious, I am curious as to why this could possibly be so. Nearly every home theater system I have owned has been also used effectively for music and I never saw the inclusion of full range tower speakers for FL and FR to be anything but a plus whether it was for movies or music. When left to my own preferences and with enough money to exercise those preferences I have always preferred a true full range 20-20k speaker system for the mains and a more theater focused speaker for other positions with the mandatory subwoofer(s) picking up the slack in the low end for the smaller theater speakers. This combo has always worked splendidly and spendidly too :) Help me to understand why this is not a preferred approach or why in your judgement it would not provide satisfactory results for both music and HT.