WHat did Audiophiles hear during Tape deck era?


How did Audiophile listened to audiophile quality during tape cassett era?
ashoka
Listen through the hiss, grasshopper. Or use Dolby tapes. Problem solved!  You know, like you listen through pops and clicks on vinyl. Which reminds me, what the heck happened to the tape hiss on CDs? 
There’s a Tool promo cassette listed on eBay as we speak for $8666.
I had a pioneer system, A-80 amp. EQ, Tape deck with dolby b and c, DBX route selector, 3BX range expander, and DBX noise reduction. Also, a KLH active noise filter unit, that would quiet everything down when the signal was low and it would bypass when the music got cranking. This would pretty much make the tape hiss disappear . I still have the DBX units and KLH in storage..
In the early 70s I had one of everything.  R to R was used for recording new albums as well as long listening sessions so you did not have to get up all the time to change the record or cassette.  I even had a 4 channel R to R, content was hard to find, but I loved the sound.  50 years later +/- I still remember the opening bass line from Whipping Post by he Allman Bro’s. Live at the Fillmore in 4 channel.
I miss those days of sharing music, everyone had a favorite band or artist.  I loved having most of the recordings of many artists back in the day.  We listened to music, TV was an after thought, hardly ever on.
Replies to this query definitely confirm my age.  Naturally the goal of recording anything is to as closely as possible reproduce the original source.  High end cassette recorders my the likes of Nakamichi and Tandberg, when properly calibrated, did an excellent job in playback.  Frequency response and bias settings for the desired tape (Metal or CrO2), when performed by an above average dealer with proper test equipment, yielded outstanding performance. Many users saw the exercise as a way to preserve their record collections and prolong stylus life.