Do you agree with John Atkinson (and me)?


 

Point 1: In the recent thread entitled ’How much is too much to spend on a system?’, I contributed this comment: "The hi-fi shouldn’t be worth more than one’s music library." I said that half-jokingly, a wisecrack that I knew might be disagreed with.

Point 2: In the 1990’s I became a regular customer at the Tower Records Classical Music Annex store in Sherman Oaks, California. The store manager knew a LOT about Classical music, but also made no secret of his distain for audiophiles, whom he viewed as caring more about the sound quality of recordings than their musical quality.

Point 3: In the early days of The Absolute Sound magazine, the writers occasionally mocked audiophiles who had a serious high end system, but whose record collections merely consisted of a small number of "demo" discs. Those audiophiles collect records that make their systems sound good, rather than assemble a system that makes their records sound good.

 

I make the above points as a preamble to the following:

In the past few months I have fallen behind in my reading of the monthly issues of Stereophile that arrive in my mailbox. Yesterday I finally got around to reading the editorial in the January issue, written by John Atkinson (filling in for current editor Jim Austin, who is recuperating from surgery, I believe). The final two paragraphs of the editorial read as follows:

 

"Back in the day, I did an analysis of Stereophile reviewers’ systems. The common factor was that all the reviewers’ collections of LPs and CDs cost a lot more than their systems. The same is true of me, even in these days of streaming."

"Isn’t that the way it should be for all music-loving audiophiles?"

 

Well, is it?

 

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In the streaming era, this is like arguing about angels fitting on the head of a pin. It has completely lost relevance to the modern landscape.

fwiw I’ve never known any of those stereotypes, people that owned high end systems and played only demo discs.  
 

  The one Trope that I am intimately acquainted with is the 25-40 year old ‘hipster’ that thinks vinyl is so cool that they shell out $30-$60 for a classic rock reissue and then play it back on a phonograph in a box gizmo that costs $80.

 

My music collection certainly cost more than my gear, but loving music and loving the way it sounds don't have to be mutually exclusive. 

There is this thing called music streaming services these days.  You can listen all day to anything and own nothing. 

My music library is over 110 million tracks at Tidal. Is this enough music for a good system?