Getting into the music


I’ve found, to my dismay, that it’s very difficult for me to listen to music for the music itself these days. Since I got into this audiophile game many years ago, little by little my musical appreciation has eroded to the point that I find it very hard  to comprehend the music itself if it doesn’t sound good.  Too often I’m listening for sonic delights rather than the message the composer is trying to convey. I find myself going from composition to composition looking for audio niceties. When something sounds good I can then begin to get into what the composer is saying. 
As a former musician, this would have been unthinkable years ago.  Music was everything to me.

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@OP Conversely, as a musician and recordist, I have to turn off the engineering and production side of my brain rather than the audiophile side.

I find it helpful to listen to the radio on an average sounding system - with less information, it's easier to focus just on the writer/composer's intentions.

I think we all go through what the OP described.  In my case I retired 2 weeks ago and my first task was to straighten out my listening room(s), which meant organizing a lot of physical media.  In the course of doing so I encounter many long unplayed recordings and I’ve been listening uncritically from an audio standpoint and having a great time.  I recommend the OP go wading into his vast collection and just play whatever grabs his fancy

Been in this hobby for about 50 years.  IME if you put a well balanced audio system together and use quality sources both digital and analogue, you can enjoy the music. The key is balance.  A mid priced system that has components of similar cost and ability will sound better than a system that has one very expensive component which will reveal the flaws of the cheaper components.  

I feel your pain. Since retiring I have chased "the sound" and finally it hit me. I was wasting too much time in the critical listening arena and not enjoying the music. Then one day, on a whim, I tried out an old pair of Klipsch Chorus ll speakers. I hooked them up to my Luxman L-509Z and played the digital file Hotel California from the Eagles’ When Hell Freezes Over album through my Aurender A20. When Don Henley hit the bass drum and I thought he was in the room with me I realized I was done. No more chasing the ultimate sound. I spent untold hours listening to amps, preamps, speakers, DACs, cables, etc. I found my happy place. I had half a million dollars of gear running through my house over the past two-three years, driving my wife nuts. Only thing left is to do some room tweaks and I am done. Or am I? The plot is always moist...

All I do now is swap out the Klipsch with an amazing sounding set of Harbeth SHL5s. The wife helps with that.

As I age, I always remember I wanted to be a musician and nothing blocks me from appreciate a great music even if it does not sound very well like garage rock.

I now feel necessity to purchase instruments and electronics to practice, create and mix. So moving to more fair and honest industry of the pro-audio