Why Don't More People Love Audio?


Can anyone explain why high end audio seems to be forever stuck as a cottage industry? Why do my rich friends who absolutely have to have the BEST of everything and wouldn't be caught dead without expensive clothes, watch, car, home, furniture etc. settle for cheap mass produced components stuck away in a closet somewhere? I can hardly afford to go out to dinner, but I wouldn't dream of spending any less on audio or music.
tuckermorleyfca6
I'm sorry Eagleman67722 but I disagree w/ your point (2).
IMHO, analytical listening is exactly what will drive people away from audio!
One needs to do analytical listening but only when setting up the system i.e. buying the gear, placing it, speaker positioning, room acoustics fine tuning & tweaking it. Once that is done, hopefully the listener will be listening to music rather than listening to the sound of his stereo (as you have suggested). The gear is just a means to an end. Judicious selection is paramount to getting to that "end" but after the selection, it's time to play music. If one continues w/ analytical listening, one is totally missing the point. Anyway, just my 2 cents. FWIW.
I think it has much more to do with aesthetics than anything else. Just look at the System rooms of any Audiogon member, and compare it with the audio/HT room of someone who is not into high end. One is displayed as a part of one's life, and the other is hidden.

Virtually everything for sale on this site would lead one to believe that there is a hobby at hand, and most people would rather pay the guy at the big audio chain store to just come in, hide everything in the walls and cabinets, and hand over the decorative, "it even wipes your rump" remote. And the remote--just like the kids toys, the dishes, and the evening mail--is hidden away as well. If it cannot be used without aesthetic intrusion, they don't want it.
Boa2, you're point about high end being in the hobbyist realm is exactly the problem. Look at how daunting and ridiculously expensive home computers were while they were still for hobbyists back in the late 70's.

With hobbies, user unfriendliness and crazy prices for little iddy biddy things are the rule. Practicality is the very last thing that's important. I guess that's what makes it a hobby.

Unfortunately the kind of good sound you can get before entering the hobby realm has a very low ceiling. This wasn't as true in the days of analog. Those mass market Marantz receivers, a moderately priced turntable and a decent speaker kit where all you needed to get a very pleasing sounding and versatile rig.

The mass manufacturers at some point figured out that features were more important to the consumer than sound quality, so for those where sound is king, we're forced to wade into the waters of the hobbyists. I guess there aren't enough of us around to cater to.
It takes a learned skill to appreciate music. If you never learned the skill you dont need an audiophile system.
Most people listen to "pop culture" music which requires no skill or time investment - very quick catchy 3 minute tunes.
As an example compare this with an opera singer who spends many many years learning to sing. It would be strange (and insulting to the singer) to think we could immediately appreciate that music with no investment. I would suggest it takes the listener many years to learn to hear and appreciate an opera singer. people dont invest that much time in music anymore and therfore have no need for high fidelity systems or ability to use them. Society is looking for quick gratification and music doesnt offer that. You need many many years of learning, education and patience which is a major commitment.
andy
That's the best explanation I've ever read for why opera accounts for less than 1% of music sales.