I have a friend from college who still has the same system he had in the seventies and my brother has all his tunes in his phone and is perfectly happy listening to them through the phones 1/4” speakers. If they’re happy and are still listening to music, I say good on them.
Friends hi-fi system not very good, what do you do or say?
So you're going over to someones home and they give you a tour and they have a hi-fi system in a room. And while visiting of course they turn it on for you not knowing that you have a very nice system in your home and you notice immediately it's just not very good. But then you're used to the very in you're listening experiences. So what do you do when they ask you what you think?
Do you say sounds really good?
Do you make suggestions?
Do you feel a desperate need to tell them about your system?
Personally, I try not to mention any details about my system. If I'm driving around in a Lamborghini I would prefer to be invisible so I don't get stared at when I get out of my car. If they had a really nice system with interesting components I would probably mention a few of the things I have and then we could bond with our common interests. Ideally, it would be cool to be in the presence of someone who knew a lot more than I did and a real learning opportunity.
Audio systems tend to be private affairs I guess. I don't necessarily want to hang out with someone and listen to tunes. Those wonderful College days where it made a lot of sense are long gone.
- ...
- 157 posts total
I’ve met a lot of people over the years who did interesting stuff in all kinds of fields, so the Lambo question wasn’t bait. Sorry you can’t drive. I kinda quit for a while b/c I live in town, but just bought a vintage bike so I’m gonna get back into the saddle, mainly back roads, not highways. As to your question about seating, there is a pair of director’s chairs against the back wall of records. Sound there is surprisingly good, and I can pull the one ottoman over to sit next to the "sweet spot" seat. The other Eames lounge is in my living room, where we watch TV and have my vintage system, along with the accompanying ottoman. We use that room as a refuge when I’m not up for firing up the big system-- which takes time to warm up, and I’m reluctant to run it without having time to play it, i.e., not an hour or two, more like a full day of listening. We have had several houses over the years and eventually downscaled to a small Texas gothic (Victorian) in town. We got rid of a lot of furniture in the course of several moves over a couple decades--- one house was very large, a white elephant--and stuff from that house simply didn’t fit into the last house in NY, which was on the waterfront of the Hudson. But I still have both Eames lounges with Ottomen. I like them, they are real (I collected George Nelson and Charles Eames back in the ’80s’). I always threatened to open a store that sold hassocks, footstools and equivalents under the name "Ottoman Empire." You are welcome to visit if you come to Austin. I’m generally around. And you are welcome to bring some LPs. Best, Bill |
There is a phenomenon often experienced at audio shows: an expensive system sucks. Often simply dismissed as just a bad set up or a bad room. There is another possibility. Maybe your ears are tuned differently. Maybe you are the problem. Or rather until your ears adjust to a new system, it may sound off. Too dull, lifeless, boomy, thin and shrill. Sometimes an exact listening position, number of people in the room, or volume can have a huge effect on the overall listening experience. We all bring our owe biases. |
@whart I would sure stop by with a bottle of Adictivo if I am in the area |
- 157 posts total