When is the golden age of high-end audio?


When is the golden age of high-end audio? When and where is the exaltation of music by the component and the component by the sound, the exaltation of buying and consumption through the sumptuary spending of high-end production? Whatever the subjugation of high-end audio to the management of capital (but this aspect of the question--that of the social and economic impact of high-end audio--always remains unresolved and fundamentally insoluble), high-end audio always had a more than subjugated function, it was a microphone held out to the universe of great music, great orchestras, great conductors, it was for a moment their glorious imaginary, that of a technical one, but an expanding one. But the universe of high-end audio is no longer this one: now it is a world that is both saturated and involuted. At some point, high-end audio lost both its triumphal imaginary and, from being in some sense a glorious microphone and playback device, it passed in some sense to the stage of mourning.
There is no longer a golden age of high-end audio: there is only its obscene and empty form. And high-end audio advertising and marketing is the illustration of this saturated and empty form.
Gone is the happy and displayed high-end component, now that it is suddenly like a man who has lost its shadow. Thus the high-end store these days closely resembles a funeral home--with the funereal luxury of the component buried, transparent in a black light, like a sarcophagus. Everything is sepulchral--white, bnlack, salmon, marble. Built like a tank--in deep, snobbish, dull black. Total absence of colors.
So, I ask you, when and where was the golden age of high-end audio. What individual component, in your opinion, is the testimony of a triumphant artistic-technical industry that was at its apogee? Why not save this golden age from decomposition? Later the historians and maybe our grandchildren will rediscover it, at the same time that they discover a culture that chose to bury it in order to definitively sell its soul to the devil, to bury its seduction and its artifices as if it were already consecrating them to another world.
slawney

Showing 2 responses by slawney

Hdm, thanks for your modern, practical, democratic response in which the bargain hunter unites with the man of emotions. Like you, I try to "make the best of what I can" but, unlike you, I do not think that the present age is the golden age. Of course, some things nowadays are even far better than the past (i.e. phono cartridges, primarily, and vinyl re-pressings). However, returning to the golden age is something more than an empty, supplementary subterfuge ("pining away"). Of course, we cannot act as if nothing has happened since then (digital, OpAmp and integrated circuitry, etc.). Ugly black boxes are a symptom of an industry able to realize economies of scale in a mass market, or wanting to cut costs on cosmetics and are accordingly not a sign of the "sumptuary spending on production" I was referring to--actually, just the opposite But this forum is not an invitation to indulge in retro hallucination. I am still waiting for someone to name a component that for them embodies the golden age of high-end audio.
Detlof, an exceptional, beautifully-written answer, in which your psychological acumen is reflected towards a whole generation's experience of leaving behind paradise! I want to cryogenically seal this post for future generations, satellite it into outer space for discovery by other life forms. Thanks.