I'm here for the enthusiasts, not the snobbery


Couple of threads have shown up lately. "Should you be an audiophile if you..." either have a certain type of gear, have a certain amount of money, or don’t make your own.

I personally reject all of that. I’m here for the enthusiasts, and those who suffer. That is, people who are enthusiastic about listening to music via electronics and those who are suffering with problems who need a little help. That’s how I try to build a community.

Also want to point out, again, that this hobby was built by hobbyists and tinkerers. The range included backyard self-electrocuting iconoclasts to scientists in acoustics and electrical engineering. I’m happy to welcome them all.

Laslty, I want to say something about the Porsche metaphor:

1 - All Porsches are ugly. This is an indisputable fact no one wants to talk about and means all debate needs to stop right there.

2 - Any motorcycle is more fun and exciting than any car.


Thank you for reading this and I’m glad I had a chance to nip these conversations in the bud. << evil troll laugh >>
erik_squires

Showing 1 response by flrun

   I would hope there are no prerequisites for being a audiophile... and would hate to think that my appreciation and love of music, stereo equipment, and everything involved was not recognized because I did not fit someone's definition of an audiophile.
I really don't apply the audiophile label to myself, when someone asks what I like to do or my hobbies I say; I love music, history, technology, old Jeeps. I mean, when they read my eulogy I would hope and rather it say something like "He was a good man, a good person, good neighbor, proudly served his country. Lover of life and always took solace in music, it took him to different places, different times, he connected with it." As opposed to; "  He was a good man, a good person, a Audiophile..."

Looking back I have always been enthusiastic about listening to music, as far back as I can remember. When I was 10-12 I was sitting in front of the speaker in the living room recording music from the radio with a cassette tape deck and microphone.
In the following years pictures show me with portable stereos listening to music.
In my teens I was in music stores searching for that song I had heard on the radio and immediately fell in love with.
From there it was stereos to listen to music, for years I had All In One AVRs until finally a few years ago I made the transition to separates.
I also took all my CDs and put them on a computer with Plex for a media server that is connected to my preamp. I recently found some missing music and went through the entire library adding folders, correcting information, and added a couple hundred songs I forgot I had. Sometimes I feel I am curating a collection, future generations need to know about and hear music like Jay Ferguson's "Thunder Island" or less known but just as good "I come alive". Or Saigon Kick's "Love Is on the Way", or Poco's "Heart of the Night", Cat Stevens, King Harvest, or countless other great artists and songs.

So if all this means I am a audiophile than I'm a audiophile. I just know that I love music, stereo equipment, all of it, and at the end of the day I just want to listen to music.

Oh yeah and I appreciate Porsches for what they are as I appreciate sports cars in general, but I prefer Domestic. 78 Pontiac TA with 455 in my younger days, now a Dodge Charger.

Had a couple of bikes, laid one down. Like they say it is not a matter of If but a matter of When. You have to be willing to accept that, and the ensuing pain.

  Well that was only going to be a paragraph...