Where are the young audiophiles?


I find it alarming that 95% of all audiophiles are seniors.According to a consultant at my local HI-FI store,young people don't seem interested in high-end equipment.They listen to music on their phone.Sooner or later, all the great neighborhood HI-FI stores will not be able to remain open. Kind of sad,don't you think?
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Showing 2 responses by sns

I'm not worried about the future of high end audio. This is a golden age of audio for me, far more choices of equipment , music, and accessibility to that music;  what a time to be a young, budding audiophile! Back when I was building my first systems you were limited to purchasing mostly new equipment through audio dealers. Used equipment difficult to locate, knowledge difficult to come by, so much great music living in obscurity. I don't miss the days of having to drive around to dealers doing ridiculous A/B demonstrations and paying too much for mediocre equipment. So much great music living in obscurity as FM radio and their lame format liabilities controlling what you could listen to. I don't let nostalgia delude my perceptions of the past, it really wasn't as good as some lead you to believe.


Many younger listeners are starting with headphones, as their wealth accumulates many will move to loudspeakers and more complex and expensive components. Today's budding audiophile has a plethora of equipment choices; new and used  equipment can be purchased with a few clicks on computer or smartphone. Steaming music sound quality continually improving, many forums from which to gain knowledge.

The young audiophiles I know are extremely happy with all their choices, and looking forward to continually upgrading their equipment. Nope the most golden of audio golden ages is yet to come, high quality sound will be available to the masses, it will no longer only belong to a fortunate few. If this is true, I wonder if we can even have an exclusive club of people calling themselves audiophiles? Is there some point in the evolution of sound quality when no more gains are to be had?
I doubt the vast majority of young or old audiophiles are purchasing and or researching their audio purchases through audio dealers. Nearly all the audiophiles I deal with at any level are diy their systems. Look at plethora of mid level audio available today, phone systems are where its at for young budding audiophiles. Perhaps they move up to loudspeaker system, perhaps not, time will tell. Audio dealers are obsolete for many of us these days.
And then you have lossless streaming doing relatively good business these days, based on responses on this site it seems many older audiophiles reject streaming audio as high end. Younger budding audiophiles are hearing music with increasing higher fidelity and may buy in to better equipment in future. And to say new recordings are crap is total nonsense, yes, some are victims of loudness wars, but get away from the most popular, commercial recordings, tons of nicely recorded contemporary recordings. I have well over 2500 original vinyl and 3500 cd rips on my NAS,  and tons of streams available to me, recording quality is all over the place with all sources.
I reiterate this is the golden age of audio with even greater possibilities ahead. Younger generations have greater access to much better audio equipment and far more music than we did. As to whether they become card carrying audiophiles is not yet determined. How many of us older generation regularly sat down and listened intently to music, evaluating and critiquing sound quality. And then over time we hear some deficiencies, upgrade time, put on repeat ad nauseam. This is the definition of an audiophile, a small demographic then, likely small demographic in the future.