Audiophiles are Full of CRAP! A Cheap Audio Man Rant

2024 ж. 22 Мам.
874 245 Рет қаралды

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Recommended Speaker List
Around $100 (These prices will fluctuate between $75 - $150)
Sony SSCS5 - Lively amzn.to/3pZNnGk
Pioneer AJ First Gen - Laid Back
Neumi BS5 -Neutral amzn.to/3q0SR3B
Around $200
Emotiva Airmotiv B1+ - Crystal Clear and Punchy emotiva.com?aff=9
Elac Debut b5.2 - Neutral amzn.to/2WPNQxw
Wharfedale Diamond 11.2 (In and Out of Stock) - Laid Back/Bassy/Detailed amzn.to/37W8hPA
JBL Stage A130 - Neutral/Great All Arounder at $179 the best value amzn.to/3t7gOHe
Around $400
Klipsch RP600M - Neutral amzn.to/3pBoXCf (This speaker’s price can fluctuate between $440-630 which is really dumb)
Jamo C93ii Bit - Boosted on Top amzn.to/3beIG6F (Can also be found cheaper at Crutchfield)
Q Acoustics 3030i - Neutral with Punch - amzn.to/2OQkpLo
Around $500
SVS Prime bit.ly/2LozJgF
Wharfedale Diamond 12.2 bit.ly/2ZckoD9
Around $600
Elac Uni-Fi UB5.2 - Neutral amzn.to/3s3srPG
Elac Debut Reference - Buttery but Detailed amzn.to/39bt6WC
Polk Reserve R100 - Neutral
Aperion Novus - Neutral and probably the best desktop speaker one can get $599 bit.ly/2Q1H9rW
Aperion Novus Open Box $449 bit.ly/3us8zGx
Wharfedale Diamonds Lush and Detailed amzn.to/3aBAso0 Come as singles
Recommended Amp List
Under $100
Aiyima A07 - Neutral and Full amzn.to/3g9YLNf
Around $130
SMSL AD18 - DAC/Amp Lively on top but solid tone controls amzn.to/3rVZxkN
SMSL SA300 $140 amzn.to/3u83oLs
Around $250
SMSL DA-9 Balanced Amp amzn.to/34SdbLs
Around $400
Emotiva TA-100 - DAC, Phono Stage, Pre Outs - Balanced and Tasty emotiva.com?aff=9
Vista Audio Spark www.vista-audio.com/products.htm
Recommended DACs
Ifi Zen DAC amzn.to/2T3wuyY
FX D01 amzn.to/3d9GY6U
SMSL SU8s amzn.to/2SWTGiw
Denafrips Ares 2 www.denafrips.com/ares
Subs
Emotiva SE8 emotiva.com?aff=9
Emotiva SE12 emotiva.com?aff=9
SVS SB1000 Pro bit.ly/3scmwsc

Пікірлер
  • If you would like to support the channel! Amazon Music and Disney Plus Free Trial amzn.to/3DRAVj9 www.patreon.com/cheapaudioman

    @cheapaudioman@cheapaudioman2 жыл бұрын
    • Randy, this is just what I needed today. Hahaha! Much better than I had thought it might be. I f 'n loved the "snowflake speaker" comment about the Kef LS50's!!!! So true.! Everything you said was right on. And your attitude was so genuine and down to earth common sense. I was like, "Yeah, about time someone said this". Anyway, loved it. I also enjoyed the interview with the Schitt man you and your friend did. You did an awesome job. I'm glad Schitt moved to Corpus Christi. God bless Texas! ✌️

      @jonpatrick66@jonpatrick662 жыл бұрын
    • A lot of yes , no and maybe here? Yes there’s lots of subjectivity with playback systems and ones perceptions and preferences. And there’s no way to know exactly (that’s prob subjective too) how recording engineers intended things, if at all! Still, my senses tastes and experiences still tell me that Haagendaz is better than Breyers, a Gordon Ramsey burger is super to Mcdonnalds, Armani is better than Gap, and 25 year old McKellen is superior to Jonny Walker black label! NO, we can’t actually define “accurate sounding!” However, my senses , imagination, and experience can decipher what’s likely closest sounding to what’s capable of any given recording, as played through what I consider better tools

      @erikalexander6602@erikalexander66022 жыл бұрын
    • In all fairness, if it is mixed with basic products, it can probably be heard through basic equipment.

      @benbraceletspurple9108@benbraceletspurple91082 жыл бұрын
    • The companies that sell the gear are worse than the audiofools. Forget Hi-Fi, the best thing I ever did was to buy some active studio monitors, these are as accurate as you can get for speakers and amplification. My $250 M-audio BX5 active monitors outperform my $1200 Hi-Fi! And M-Audio isn't even the best manufacturer out there.

      @Toilet_Sniper@Toilet_Sniper2 жыл бұрын
    • NO FRIGGIN WAY YOU'RE A FOOL.

      @ronniewall1481@ronniewall14812 жыл бұрын
  • "normal people use audio hardware to listen to music, audiophiles use music to listen the audio hardware " -- random guy on a pc hardware forum.

    @grizllyman@grizllyman2 жыл бұрын
    • 😂😂😂😂😂😂

      @Rah-know@Rah-know Жыл бұрын
    • It's true! I used to be one of those guys, and you are right, listening to the differences between different gear etc, tiresome

      @geddylee501@geddylee501 Жыл бұрын
    • @@geddylee501 glad you made the 12 steps towards the exit :)

      @grizllyman@grizllyman Жыл бұрын
    • mad bc hes right

      @mentalkidgaming357@mentalkidgaming357 Жыл бұрын
    • 😅

      @nicolasnicolas3889@nicolasnicolas3889 Жыл бұрын
  • I used to buy into the whole “audiophile” scene but after getting more into recording and studio gear (now using Genelec monitors and RME for DAC), I’ve realized not only does consumer hi-fi stuff has a ton of hype priced into it, almost nobody talks about how at a certain point, the acoustic treatment of a room plays a bigger role than incrementally improving the gear.

    @raydollete444@raydollete444 Жыл бұрын
    • 110% The room becomes more important very very quickly

      @JayEllul@JayEllul Жыл бұрын
    • just get a headphone then the room not so important anymore lol the thing about crazy priced audiophile gear is they are not intended for you unless if you are super rich and own a mansion specifically renovated for audiophile purpose with house pricing flew through the sky nowadays and everyone cramped in one small apartment its becoming very difficult hence the closed back headphone route is the way to go

      @loucipher7782@loucipher7782 Жыл бұрын
    • @@loucipher7782 I know this reply probably wasn’t just meant for my use case, but since you replied to this thread, I’ll say for the recording hobbyist you really have to do both; very few people do recording and mixing entirely in headphones, and if like me you are recording instruments and vocals, you have to do at least some acoustic treatment anyway. It’s unfortunately not a cheap hobby any way you cut it.

      @raydollete444@raydollete444 Жыл бұрын
    • @@raydollete444 i was under the impression that audiophile only goes one way, the listening part and in vocal recording mostly people use closed back headphones anyway so there wont be double sounding? atleast thats what i saw in every artist MV. Anyway its good to have the best of both worlds if you can do it, i'm not against it or anything but it will certainly cost more

      @loucipher7782@loucipher7782 Жыл бұрын
    • The acoustics change the sound. Facts

      @EneRec@EneRec Жыл бұрын
  • When I first got into audio I found a lot of snake oil pretty quickly. For me, it came down to this. The difference between the 2-5K systems from the audio store and the $700 rack system at the big box store was night and day. The difference between the 2-5K systems and the 50K systems was the difference between 12 noon and 12:15 pm. $15K speaker cables are a big ass red flag to me. I call that product a "stupid tax."

    @tmdillon1969@tmdillon1969 Жыл бұрын
    • Don't be ridiculous, those speaker cables are made from audiophile-grade atoms.

      @GrandHighGamer@GrandHighGamer Жыл бұрын
    • The guy who invented those cables is chillin on a beach in Tahiti sipping mohitos right now 😎

      @a-listercrowley2737@a-listercrowley2737 Жыл бұрын
    • Honestly, you can spend shitloads of money on hardware.. but many don’t focus on controlling your listening environment/room which is way more important. I could have a 15k-20k setup but have some wild nulls/etc, to me that’s stupid as fuck. In essence your equipment is not working properly. I’ll take a 3k setup including studio monitors + sub, DAC, and regular xlr wires, but in a properly treated room (doesnt mean a dead room). Taking that over 20k worth in audiophile equipment. Tbf, properly treating a room can cost a lot too.

      @L3uX@L3uX Жыл бұрын
    • Spot on

      @fredjones554@fredjones554 Жыл бұрын
    • @@a-listercrowley2737 While listening to some music on a cheap bluetooth speaker 😅.

      @baloghlcb@baloghlcb Жыл бұрын
  • I'm an engineer who has worked in the "premium brand" electronics industry for almost 2 decades. There are a limited number of manufacturers of components--most products trying to achieve the same function use the same parts or another manufacturer's version of the same parts. Also remember that no matter the sales price, the motivation of the manufacturer is always to minimize cost. While there are quality differences between semiconductors, it's usually much more of a longevity issue than a functional issue. Resistors, Capacitors, and Inductors are where you may "hear" effects. The digital stuff either works or it doesn't. You either have a good design or you don't. Most "premium" brands are virtually indistinguishable in actual function and parts selection from the mass-consumer stuff. Often, they are the same thing with "badge engineering" (change the name and charge 5x the price). A lot of well known brands are owned by the same companies and designed by the same engineers using the same parts. Sometimes, companies will sell the same product under several different brands to capture the "brand loyalty" factor of consumers. There are a few products out there specifically engineered to be better in some respects, but it is a lot of diminishing returns. I personally hate the term "audiophile" because there has been so much snake-oil. $50K speaker wires, magic spray that gives your CDs that "warm, analog sound" (which is not only impossible, but is admitting that people are chasing a particular colored sound as opposed to "purity"). I once saw an article where a guy said his friend gave him his old $10K speaker wires because he got some $20K speaker wires. He said he couldn't hear any difference (I'd say you could use Romex and most people couldn't hear the difference). He said his dog seemed to like the sound of the new speaker wires, which confirmed something he'd always suspected: his dog has better hearing than him.

    @unrelativistic@unrelativistic Жыл бұрын
    • I have a degree in electronics, microprocessor technology, basic wiring systems, basic electrical fundamentals, and industrial electrical systems. You're spot on. Copper is probably still the best way to go for transmitting info to the speakers, then it's the gauge of the wire. Beyond that, it's really silly to over analyze to the point of idiocy. Sure there are quality tolerances in resistors, capacitors and such, but most ears can't hear the difference. One exception I have found, is in coils. Especially the larger ones. But that's more in the quality of the build, (solder joints, base assembly and such), and not the materials. Again, copper is copper.

      @royalway12@royalway12 Жыл бұрын
    • I can add a lot more "Warmth" with the RC20 VST, which is something that ACTUALLY AFFECTS AUDIO than some b.s. magic placebo spray or some pricey cables.

      @mana_beast_beats1114@mana_beast_beats1114 Жыл бұрын
    • what a wild ride of a comment, for audio gear designing to crazy people spending a cars worth on copper for their dog lmao

      @user-pc8tb7hg1lHandlesRDumb@user-pc8tb7hg1lHandlesRDumb Жыл бұрын
    • Thanks for the reality check, very refreshing.

      @echohunter4199@echohunter4199 Жыл бұрын
    • @Regulus --- Quark: I want you to try something for me. Take a sip of this. Garak: What is it? Quark: A human drink. It's called root beer. Garak: I don't know. { Garak scowls/snears } Quark: Come on. Aren't you just a little bit curious? { Garak sighs, and cautiously drinks... } Quark: What do you think?Garak: It's vile. Quark :I know. It's so bubbly and cloy and happy. { Garak smiles slowly as Quark speaks } Garak: Just like the Federation. Quark: But you know what's really frightening? If you drink enough of it, you begin to like it. Garak: It's insidious. Quark: Just like the Federation. Garak: Do you think they'll be able to save us? Quark:I hope so.

      @mana_beast_beats1114@mana_beast_beats1114 Жыл бұрын
  • You can tell it is audiophile level quality, when your purchase helps someone else get that much closer to owning a yacht.

    @dreamcoma2213@dreamcoma2213 Жыл бұрын
    • And what's a yacht ? A hole in the water where you can dump stacks of money in !

      @xFD2x@xFD2x Жыл бұрын
    • And what device did you use to post your comment on here, latest iPhone or iPad, cheapest smartphone or old second hand pc

      @frankcousins7655@frankcousins7655 Жыл бұрын
    • Wow so clever, but it is only that, a clever quip that has no meaning or relevance to what is being said and discussed.

      @Skoogman13@Skoogman13 Жыл бұрын
    • Sour grapes.

      @ruger6049@ruger6049Ай бұрын
  • As a musician I can confirm this. Whenever we record something with our band, we do the mix & mastering with high quality headphones(iem's) or studio speakers or passive speakers but after we're done doing that it's more exciting to see how the music is going to sound on different parameters like yeah shitty headphones or cars or phone speakers because the majority of the people don't even have top of the line headphones anyway, so it's more important to understand how my music is going to sound in cars and average priced headphones&speakers.

    @erenteker6908@erenteker69082 жыл бұрын
    • Burzum has an incredible sound and it’s made from crappy cheap equipment.

      @willissudweeks1050@willissudweeks10502 жыл бұрын
    • 30 years ago i used to work in a TV studio. One day we were making a musical show. The guy in the audio booth was monitoring the sound of the orchestra with studio monitor. Then he did something that really surprised me. He switch to small full-range speakers. i asked him why he was doing this since he had those « better » expensive speakers? He said he had to make sure his mix will sound good on every receivers,small, big, hi-fi or not. Small speakers are less forgiving if there is too much bass or too much high. Move forward, 5 years ago i vas working on a musical video and I had a big argument with the audio engineer because it sounded like crap. He argued that he used very expensive speakers and very expensive software emulators etc... The whole production staff was on his side until i asked him to play it back in his car. Bam! The problem was his expensive sound system. So it’s not the price that makes it right.

      @Wurlyscope@Wurlyscope2 жыл бұрын
    • I mixed a song these last few days. I thought it was done, I cross referenced it in my car, on my hifi and on two different pairs of headphones, and I needed to make adjustments. Basically, thanks to my Sennheiser HD485 headphones, I noticed some really annoying frequencies that I was able to scoop out. Only minor level adjustments are left to do now, along with taking out some high end air from the vocals and the snare, and that'll be it. The HD485 are kinda old and were affordable. Cross referencing is important. Those headphones aren't audiophile headphones, but they helped me a note.

      @nedim_guitar@nedim_guitar Жыл бұрын
    • I always mix my music firta with my studio headphones but especially with the cheap 20$ Xiaomi headphones from my smartphone.

      @user-be9ey4jb3c@user-be9ey4jb3c Жыл бұрын
    • @@willissudweeks1050 burzum never had an amazing sound. Cringe with white noise.

      @marsoblivi0n945@marsoblivi0n945 Жыл бұрын
  • The most important thing I learned trying to get into "audiophile" stuff is that diminishing returns are huge and "good enough" is good enough.

    @ffwast@ffwast Жыл бұрын
    • My AVR (Yamaha), record player (Audio Technica), and 5.1 speaker setup (Sony bookshelves and Klipsch 12" sub) cost about $1000 altogether, maybe a little more. It sounds terrific to me, I enjoy listening to music and movies on it. I don't think upgrading a single component would make me any happier.

      @JaredSutter@JaredSutter Жыл бұрын
    • Pretty much golden standard of every hobby is diminishing returns

      @youdontknowme3935@youdontknowme3935 Жыл бұрын
    • @@JaredSutter that’s ok, doesn’t mean it’s ok for others

      @frankcousins7655@frankcousins7655 Жыл бұрын
    • I get shat on over on Reddit for liking $15 Skull Candy Ink Plus earbuds & $25 One Odio A71 Wired Over Ear Cup Headphones. Apparently the ONLY way to properly enjoy music is with a $300 set of headphones, and you can ONLY listen to FLAC files.

      @mana_beast_beats1114@mana_beast_beats1114 Жыл бұрын
    • Most of the time, at the extremes of the top end there aren't even "diminishing returns," there's just literally no returns period. People are seriously spending hundreds or thousands to get nominal "improvements" that are either empirically not measurable, or so off in the weeds that they're far outside the realm of human hearing capability to detect. It's amazing. Audiophools will throw thousands at a "problem" that's not actually a problem in any meaningful way, and then claim that their solution "just sounds better" than something an actual audio electronics engineer with a degree and everything could have pointed them to for a fraction of the price.

      @wasd____@wasd____ Жыл бұрын
  • As an audio engineer, audiophile forums are hilarious

    @ForkySeven@ForkySeven Жыл бұрын
    • "Warmth" is just fancy speak for "Subtle Harmonic Distortion & Slightly Better Midrange Presence." And RC20 VST will let me add that. Heck, I can even add Vinyl Crackle or Tape Hiss -- and I bet some snobby Audio Hipster wouldn't even know it was just an altered CD Rip.

      @mana_beast_beats1114@mana_beast_beats1114 Жыл бұрын
    • @@mana_beast_beats1114 How much per song? I have 1 million dollar budget.

      @chickenandpizza2483@chickenandpizza2483 Жыл бұрын
    • I find audiophile products hilarious, I've been using studio monitors for years and when I got into the headphone game, almost every headphone lacks something major in the sound. It's like these people have specific fetishes for different aspects of sound and just no one is interested in a complete signature that plays everything well.

      @undefeatedmc@undefeatedmc Жыл бұрын
    • @@undefeatedmc and what headphone would you recommend

      @benjapizarro981@benjapizarro981 Жыл бұрын
    • @@undefeatedmc well yeah that's kinda the point of being an audiophile, usually we do have one or two standard reference or daily use phones and a collection of cans for all different uses, one for crazy Soundstage, these ones have great imaging, bass, treble, sparkle, etc...alot of time is spent switching headphones to suit the current song that is playing, adjusting eqs...its definitely a fixation on how a certain piece of gear works and how to get the best from, and also satisfying your own preference in sound signature... I feel like a majority of the bs honestly is coming from the IEM/ultra high end community, those guys live on a cloud 😉

      @POPDELUSION@POPDELUSION Жыл бұрын
  • I’m a sound engineer, at work we have several studios with the same gear, but it sounds different because the lay-out of the rooms is different. So how on earth can you say ‘how the artist intended.. 🤯there are so many variables! I liked this rant!:-)

    @djclass005@djclass0052 жыл бұрын
    • At which place do you work?

      @rabarebra@rabarebra2 жыл бұрын
    • @@rabarebra odd question

      @HoloScope@HoloScope2 жыл бұрын
    • @@HoloScope Not a odd question to ask what kind of place he works at. Could be anything, or just something he says. You do not need to have asperger's like you do, who thinks that I specifically asked for his ID, Bank account, and home address. LOL, weirdo! It's cool to know which studio he works at. Could be Abbey Road studio. They use lots of Quested speakers.

      @rabarebra@rabarebra2 жыл бұрын
    • @@rabarebra that's funny because I actually have Asperger's 😭

      @HoloScope@HoloScope2 жыл бұрын
    • True that! I constantly listen to different types of music and critique sound engineers, while listening to different recordings. I easily can hear the worst recordings through my monitors .Most of my equipment is the best vintage that bring out the finest in detail with great specs. There are those who are sold on buying hi-end and there are those who truly listen.

      @TheDistrict644@TheDistrict6442 жыл бұрын
  • Audiophiles spend so much time listening for what they have been told to hear they stop enjoying the music. The best upgrade I ever made was few pints of good beer then every thing sounds awesome.

    @mikepxg6406@mikepxg64062 жыл бұрын
    • Yes! 🤘🏼

      @KristianWontroba@KristianWontroba2 жыл бұрын
    • I once was told by a unknown stranger that he once was intoxicated by THC while listening to his favorite music, and the experiece of the music was at least twice as good then without being stoned. But since he do not want to be addicted to drugs he started to spend his money on very expensive cables and cable lifters searching for audiophile nirvana.

      @mathiasjohannesson9833@mathiasjohannesson98332 жыл бұрын
    • @@mathiasjohannesson9833 😁😁😁

      @jimshaw899@jimshaw8992 жыл бұрын
    • lol

      @ts4gv@ts4gv2 жыл бұрын
    • @kenny hintz Aren't you a "special" snowflake! Let me guess, you have golden ears and you can hear crocodiles fart under water in the Nile from your house. 😂 Yep, audiophiles ARE full of crap and you're a good example of that fact.

      @Mr_Spock512@Mr_Spock5122 жыл бұрын
  • As a recording artist myself, I can tell you that we listen to the master on everything else other than the studio monitors. The whole point of a mastered song is to make sure that it sounds acceptable on what the majority people uses for listening to music, daaaaah....

    @Serbofreak@Serbofreak Жыл бұрын
    • A recording artist with no songs just phone videos 😂 ok 😭

      @leonardhpls6@leonardhpls63 ай бұрын
  • Your rant against some people's arrogant audiophile mentality made me forget about my own troubles for a moment on a very difficult and dark day. This video is a year old so the chances that you will read my comments are small but I would like to offer my thanks anyway. Keep making your videos!

    @williamsynnott@williamsynnott8 ай бұрын
  • In Mexico, we have something called the "Chivas Regal effect" you see, Tequila use to be a cheap product intended for the poor and people just concerned to be drunk. A brand came with the great idea to raise the price in order to appear like a high-end product for the elites. Now Tequila is exported all over the world with pride and considered as a fine product for "educated" buyers. How many people judge which product is better based only on the price tag?. Common-sense tend to say that a expensive product is better than a cheaper one, but some manufacturers know this and will take advantage. (also happen in other industries)

    @aguirreortiz4807@aguirreortiz48072 жыл бұрын
    • the best example of this is Apple products in general

      @ad1ct3d@ad1ct3d2 жыл бұрын
    • I'm no tequila guy at all, but a few year ago, a guy lined up ~8 tequilas for me to taste. The cheap ones (wait for it) burned my throat on the way down, the $120 was smooth......HOWEVER!!! the Costco brand tequila was as good as the $120 bottle

      @hamjohn8737@hamjohn87372 жыл бұрын
    • I think it all depends on the product, we must all remember and manufacturer will charge whatever they think they can sell, of course they want to charge the highest price the public will pay to increase profits, thats just good business sense I guess, buyer be ware and all.

      @mohammadwasilliterate8037@mohammadwasilliterate8037 Жыл бұрын
    • there simply is no cheap tequila where i'm at. nor cheap vodka. hah! all so high-class stuff...

      @itnaklipse1669@itnaklipse1669 Жыл бұрын
    • @@itnaklipse1669 Are you in Sweden? 😂 Booze is expensive here.

      @nedim_guitar@nedim_guitar Жыл бұрын
  • My favorite line of BS from self proclaimed audiophiles is in relation to CD drives. The notion that highly accurately controlled speed is somehow necessary for "good" sound reproduction from a disc transport is simply amazing. It's almost as if they don't know and are incapable of understanding that the only thing the transport does is spin the disc so that the laser can read the coded information, which included the time reference. That information is then buffered in software memory and decoded by the DAC. The simple fact is that with enough memory and power the transport could spin at 10,000 RPM for a few seconds to read all the info, and then stop moving completely for the duration of the music playing.

    @edbennett8257@edbennett8257 Жыл бұрын
    • A few years ago, I saw an audiophile claim that there were tangible differences in the audio, being streamed from different brands of hard drive, along with a "review" of the audio qualities of several different hard drives. I for one really like the warmth and glow I get from the ones and zeros on Seagate drives. I find it adds a pleasing cromulence to the treble frequencies. Of course I only use gold plated USB cables, so that the ones and zeros come out all polished and shiny, and in a pleasing san-serif font

      @PandemonicHypercube@PandemonicHypercube Жыл бұрын
    • This probably made more a difference when the drives couldn’t read very far ahead. Remember some transports even had fancy clamps?

      @raydollete444@raydollete444 Жыл бұрын
    • @@raydollete444 It has never been true. One of the great selling points when CDs first came out was that they were "skip proof". This was because they spun the disc and buffered the code for several seconds in hardware/software before they actually started playing. Yes, I remember some transports with fancy clamps and other geegaws, but they were all just so much snake oil to attempt to make a given product look "better" to the consumer boost profit margins. Don't get me wrong, in the early days there truly were some that were much better than others. Some did have truly atrocious mechanicals that were prone to outright failure, but mainly due to the limitations of memory and processing power available for reasonable costs, but consistency of the speed of the disc was never a factor

      @edbennett8257@edbennett8257 Жыл бұрын
    • @@edbennett8257 Different CD mechanisms do affect ripping accuracy. I buy CDs, then rip to FLAC. The FLAC can then be compressed to MP3 or what have you. Some old CDs I have are on their way to data heaven (bit rot), and these present more problems for some CD mechanisms I have used.

      @boggisthecat@boggisthecat Жыл бұрын
    • @@boggisthecat True, but it is merely a difference in firmware, not speed stability. Some drives oversample more than others, and some have better laser focus which allow them to compensate for corrupted bits, scratches, or other damage. I was speaking strictly about stable speed of the drive affecting the playback quality in the same way that variations in turntable speed will cause wow and flutter. Wow and flutter do not exist for CD drives, unless the quartz timing chips in the hardware are defective and causing variations in decoding.

      @edbennett8257@edbennett8257 Жыл бұрын
  • This is what happens when hobby meets community. The hobbyist by themselves is just really interested in their particular hobby. But when they begin interacting with other hobbyists, they start organizing a hierarchy and standards to judge each member’s status within this hierarchy. With something as subjective as audio, the standards tend to become arbitrary, or just tied to something more measurable, like monetary value. Thus, you get $500 gold/platinum audio cables and what not.

    @pkre707@pkre707 Жыл бұрын
  • I consider myself an "audiophile", but not because i have expensive stuff, but because i want to listen as much of the songs i like as i can. And also for the fact that i really find beautiful the engineering behind sound, everything, i want to learn all i can about it

    @makotheowl@makotheowl Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, I fall into the same camp. I don't care "what the artist intended", but I do care that my nicer headphones let me pick out subtle details that are indistinguishable on lesser cans.

      @Thanatos2996@Thanatos2996 Жыл бұрын
    • In Spanish there is a word for people who passionately loves music and is “melómano” I always thought that Audiophile was the English word for it 😅 but in English is melomaniac

      @OhQueBacan@OhQueBacan Жыл бұрын
    • Another name for audiophile is sucker, buy something that is good enough and a decent pair of headphones, that’s it!

      @paulm2467@paulm2467 Жыл бұрын
    • Same, I feel like having higher quality headphones allow us to appreciate our favourite songs more. Like the composer put in a lot of details that are unnoticeable on lower end gears, and I find it interesting to dissect what makes the song good.

      @czyu3361@czyu3361 Жыл бұрын
    • @@paulm2467 Anything beyond $1k for headphone + amp or $2-3k for stereo hifi is overkill for me and greatly diminishing returns. If you shop wisely, I think there’s a sweet spot in that price range that can satisfy a music lover for life. (In my case, Senn HD600 + Schiit Amp for headphones, Cambridge Amp + KEF q350 and SVS sub for hifi) . Audio gear, like music production gear can so easily turn into an obsession, where you’re always searching for the next best thing rather than enjoying and being satisfied with what you’ve got. These will probably be the last systems I buy (unless they break) and I’m good with that.

      @AdamsBrew78@AdamsBrew7811 ай бұрын
  • My friend is a musician and an a/v engineer. He has a saying I've taken to heart "sounds good, is good". If you're enjoying it, it’s good. It doesn't matter what anyone else thinks.

    @donatj@donatj2 жыл бұрын
    • I UNDERSTAND BUT MONEY MEANS MORE THAN JUST SOUND. BETTER BUILT.

      @ronniewall1481@ronniewall14812 жыл бұрын
    • kzhead.info/sun/o7efc7WGjmJml6M/bejne.html

      @ronniewall1481@ronniewall14812 жыл бұрын
    • @@ronniewall1481 bro they're all made in China

      @whydoe5289@whydoe52892 жыл бұрын
    • @@whydoe5289 NOPE

      @ronniewall1481@ronniewall14812 жыл бұрын
    • @@whydoe5289 YOU DON'T KNOW MUCH.

      @ronniewall1481@ronniewall14812 жыл бұрын
  • As a recording engineer, the things that you talk about are what hold me back from spending more on a home HiFi. At work I listen and record through $200k worth of gear in a full treated space. Artists approve mixes listening in their cars or over their airpods. Nobody gets to hear the final result any better than me and/or the mastering engineer. I heard the recording and mix at its best. Everywhere else is an approximation. Someone listens on a $500k system will it be better than what I heard. Absolutely not. I was there in the room with the musicians. Will it sound great? I hope so. Anyway, my home system maybe totals $2k in gear and I like it. It's meant for enjoyment. My system at work is picking apart everything. Analyzing every minute detail and it's exhaustion but it is meant to be. Anyway, good rant. Totally agree.👍

    @Titanius1066@Titanius10662 жыл бұрын
    • You know it could be better than what you heard. It won't be the same as what you heard, but it certainly could be better!

      @RennieAsh@RennieAsh2 жыл бұрын
    • A friend of mine is a audio engineer , he basically told me the same. He loves smaller speakers nothing over the top. Cables are just XLR industrial standard anyone can buy for cheap . He laughs at these prima Donnas too

      @MichelLinschoten@MichelLinschoten2 жыл бұрын
    • ​@@RennieAsh It would just be different but still hopefully sound great.

      @Titanius1066@Titanius10662 жыл бұрын
    • "Artists approve mixes listening in their cars or over their airpods." I'd argue that those aren't artists, and if they are, they're at the beginning of their career, trying to get their music out. I doubt Roger Waters ever said "Hey, the tempo is good and we hit all the right notes. Release it."

      @rossnaheedy3400@rossnaheedy34002 жыл бұрын
    • @@rossnaheedy3400 aren't artists? They played the music and often times wrote it as well. That is most certainly an artistic exercise. To not call then artists is incorrect and elitist.

      @Titanius1066@Titanius10662 жыл бұрын
  • It fills my heart with endless joy that you get up basically every day and mercilessly bully audiophiles whose opinions are so subjective that they think no one can argue with them. You're my hero.

    @louiegolden@louiegolden Жыл бұрын
  • There's a whole scene in the end of the movie "Once" after they've mastered their whole album. The audio tech goes, "okay, it's time for the car test". The band looks puzzled, so he explains. "We've been listening to these songs on these expensive studio monitors, it's time to listen to it on some crappy car speakers".

    @SeraphsWitness@SeraphsWitness Жыл бұрын
    • In the '50s and '60s, rock & roll studios would master songs to sound good on AM radio, including pocket transistors. Play it on a high-end setup and it might sound "bad", but play it on a crappy radio and it's got the right feel. Classical music, on the other hand, tends to be another deal. As an orchestra musician myself, I have a solid aural picture of what live music sounds like. I routinely record rehearsals and concerts and use my aural memory to judge the fidelity of the reproduction against reality.

      @jeromeglick@jeromeglick5 ай бұрын
  • When I'm at the final stages of my master, I always do listening tests on 3 other sound systems: 1. 2.1 channel PC speakers 2. Standard headphones/earphones 3. In my car Because that's what the majority of people listen on. If you can make them sound good on these, then it'll sound even better on a quality sound system.

    @oogalee@oogalee2 жыл бұрын
    • For commercial sales and to preserve high quality you will still need one reference source such as active near field monitors. Without the reference quality, the audiophiles with great audio systems will have unevenly high levels of mids and highs. It will be very irritating with these frequencies levels unbearably high. You are correct to listen on many playback devices, none should be overwhelming you with uneven frequency levels.

      @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene@WildernessMusic_GentleSerene2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly! Just made nearly the same comment.

      @Darrylizer1@Darrylizer12 жыл бұрын
    • @@worm6820 It certainly can happen, and does in the higher echelons of the music business. It happened to a friend of mine. They recorded and mixed their album here in Austin, but took it to a mastering guru in, I believe it was, NYC to "master" their final mix. Their live sound is very bottom heavy, as was their final mix and their previous recordings. But when he came back from having it done, something that isn't cheap and he had been excited about for a while, he asked me to listen to the cut again without telling me it was the final product. We listened to it on the sound system at the music venue where we worked, where most of their local shows were played, and my first reaction was, "What happened to the bottom?!" He then told me that it was filtered by the mastering engineer because it was his opinion that it would overwhelm the average sound system and appear distorted. :( He wasn't happy about my response and I would probably not have mentioned it had I known it was going to be the final FINAL mix that went to the CD manufacturers. But he wanted an honest opinion, and that's why he played it for me again without telling me first. Good thing that I got to continue running sound for them and enjoying that big fat bottom end through our "mostly" Crown/JBL equipped system. And I can always listen to their other records that weren't stepped on by the "pro's" in the industry. On a side note, another friend of mine went to work for a large label, increasing the chances that his band would be able to release something under their umbrella of influence, reputation, marketing, distribution, etc. It's a big boost in the chances of your success in the industry. They recorded an album, but it was never released because it got stuck in the cogs of the the giant web of management when someone in the chain of decision making never could make up their damn mind about the sound of the kick drum. Imagine that! All that work, someone else owns it, and you can't release it because some moron doesn't like the way the kick sounds.

      @shmaknapublar@shmaknapublar2 жыл бұрын
    • I say make the final master the best it can possibly be on the highest end system you have access to. If someone is listening to it on a lesser system that can't handle the dynamics or frequency reproduction, and they notice that it doesn't sound right, they should have the ability to adjust the levels of their equipment to best suit it's limitations. If they don't notice there is distortion, then who cares. That's my philosophy anyway. :)

      @shmaknapublar@shmaknapublar2 жыл бұрын
    • @@shmaknapublar That would make sense if most people weren't listening through ear buds or car stereos. I'm not going to pull over and adjust EQ on my car stereo every time I listen to a different album. If I have to spend $20K on my stereo for your mix to sound good, your mix sucks!

      @lavachemist@lavachemist2 жыл бұрын
  • It's all about personal taste. I don't care how the artist "intended" it to sound. I just want it to sound good to me and that doesn't mean jacked up bass.

    @ldchappell1@ldchappell12 жыл бұрын
    • To be fair, it’s the engineers who do all the crazy work.

      @Tholi@Tholi2 жыл бұрын
    • What ever happened to Beats headphones ? Did people finally catch onto the fact that they didn't really sound that good and cost a ridiculous amount of money ?

      @hifismiffy@hifismiffy2 жыл бұрын
    • Yes hate jacked up bass. I think its best when it sounds you can hear the bass loud but not taking over everything else. I thinks its nice when you have space between all instruments and dont struggle to hear something, something like one of the early police albums . Albums need the be produced well as well as your hardware to have reasonable quality .

      @paulgoodwin3642@paulgoodwin36422 жыл бұрын
    • @@paulgoodwin3642 I have to laugh when I see these guys with expensive sound systems in their cars and they've got their bass so cranked up their car is rattling down the street. Their teeth are probably rattling too. 🤪📢🎵🎶

      @ldchappell1@ldchappell12 жыл бұрын
    • @@ldchappell1 theyre in search of the brown note. The one that make you crap your pants. Because theyre so far up their own arses they cant crap.

      @paulgoodwin3642@paulgoodwin36422 жыл бұрын
  • "Contempt prior to investigation" - THANKS FOR THIS! I find this is something I encounter with so many people on so many things in life and to finally have a name for it is great!

    @LuckeGabriel@LuckeGabriel Жыл бұрын
  • I never bought into the “audiophile” way of thinking myself, thinking about all the rubbish with hyper expensive cables, cables with electrons aligned etc. That is the kind of video I kind of was expecting when I clicked on your video. Boy I was wrong! You have some seriously good and well thought and funded arguments there. Thumbs up from me!

    @roygalaasen@roygalaasen Жыл бұрын
  • As a musician/producer/engineer/mixer with 25 years of experience I can say, your ROOM makes more of a difference than your speakers or amps ever will.

    @fleshtonegolem@fleshtonegolem2 жыл бұрын
    • Speakers with better linearity off axis will inevitably sound better in any room. Room treatment won't help much with nulls. Treatment also doesn't beat SBIR. Two subs will give a better low end result in room than any simple 2.0 or 2.1 setup with any amount of treatment. After proper placement and 2 subs, a home listener can focus on treatment, unless the initial room was too reflective. A lot of bullshit in the pro audio world too! The amount of pro audio store clerks trying to sell pathetic foam absorbers for like 5 times the price you could build a set of rockwool bass traps that would outperform said foam absorbers any day of the week At the end of the day, autosuggestion will change a system's sound the most.

      @Gamez4eveR@Gamez4eveR2 жыл бұрын
    • Oh my, that foolish argument encountered here yet again! Just like saying that if you were a gynecologist, it would have also made you into an expert of making love! Yet, knowing all there is to know about genitalia does not automatically make you into a great lover Same here - the business of recording and "mixing" music does not really translate into knowing all there is to know about architectural acoustics. Or perceptual/medical acoustics. Cheers!

      @yoryteperman429@yoryteperman4292 жыл бұрын
    • @@yoryteperman429 thank you

      @Gamez4eveR@Gamez4eveR2 жыл бұрын
    • yes, this is why I practice my trump in a 14x28 empty wood building, the reveb and sound are amazing lol...

      @randomguy-dy3uy@randomguy-dy3uy2 жыл бұрын
    • It's safe to say you are right. But we won't win against the head up the ass crowd.

      @chuckmaddison2924@chuckmaddison29242 жыл бұрын
  • Something to remember in almost any hobby is that diminishing returns are a huge aspect. 10x pricier will not gaurantee 10x better. It should be important to find where that point of balance is for YOU and for your own sanity

    @coolmemesbudd@coolmemesbudd Жыл бұрын
    • While it's true that 10X the price will not GUARANTEE 10X better, if you choose wisely, 10X the price CAN sound 10X better. On the other hand, my stereo is worth around $25K. And it's more musically and emotionally engaging that a $500K system I heard. Granted, the $500K system was very impressive and dynamic. But it just didn't move me.

      @LorenzoNW@LorenzoNW Жыл бұрын
    • A great point being high-end graphics cards, they’re priced many magnitudes more than midrange GPUs but don’t offer that much of a difference.

      @KingKrouch@KingKrouch Жыл бұрын
    • As an engineer and physics lecturer, I note that the pricier the equipment gets, there is a direct proportionality in the reliance on pseudo science to justify the costs. The perfect sound is much like the perfect painting, what was the artist hearing when they created the piece?

      @grinwald633@grinwald633 Жыл бұрын
    • @@grinwald633 In some instances, it’s true that pseudo science is used top justify cost because science can’t offer an adequate explanation. I’ve always been a fan of Audience cables and power conditioners. As John McDonald, President of Audience said, “The idea of cables as components is a controversial subject. There are many who think that “wire is wire” and don’t accept that cables can either optimize or compromise the performance of an audio system. Traditional tests for difference in cable reveal very little if any electrical differences between brands. However, the human ear/brain is a far more sensitive and discriminating test apparatus and deciphers differences in cable brands rather easily. This ability can be developed much like wine tasting. As you become more experienced, differences, shadings and nuance become more readily noticeable.” Newbies or people who just know enough about audio to think they know what they’re talking about are the first to snap back at comments like John’s, calling it placebo effect and snake oil. Invariably, they never listened to high-end components themselves to hear the difference. They just demand double-blind studies without understanding why they’re useless for evaluating audio gear. From the consumer point of view, I’m not that hung-up on the science. My integrated amp took 250 hours to break in. And I’ve yet to read a scientific explanation of what occurs during that break-in period. On the surface, a $200 Purple fuse seems ludicrous. But if it makes my $8K amp sound significantly better, I’m sold - simple as that.

      @LorenzoNW@LorenzoNW Жыл бұрын
    • @@LorenzoNW Hello there, as a late arrival to audiophilia, I was initially dismissive of several things I was told by committed but non technical audiophiles. Some but not all have proven to be true, and for the life of me I cannot offer a sensible explanation for the ones that appear to hold water. There is a reasonable technical argument for good quality cables, the human ear is an amazing instrument and can discern incredibly small changes. Changes that are barely discernable on an oscilloscope. I am also prepared to believe your amp breaking in over 250 hours. I would suggest that may be due to thermal cycling and impacted more by the number of times it was on and got warm/hot and switched off and allowed to hit a background temperature. It could be the quality of the capacitors or coils. But again there is probably a sound scientific explanation. Regards

      @grinwald633@grinwald633 Жыл бұрын
  • We need more people like you. Thank you for your honesty. One of my most favorite rants ever. I love it!!! Keep on listening!

    @Sammy.U@Sammy.U Жыл бұрын
  • I worked at Sun Studios and at Syncro sound in Boston. Master mixes were always listened to on cheap Woolworth or K-mart record players. It was to always to hear what the majority of people would hear it sound as.

    @jimmyt6180@jimmyt6180 Жыл бұрын
  • As a musician learning how to mix, master and record my own music, I can say every teacher out there will tell you this one thing. Just because it sounds great in your room doesn't mean it will sound great everywhere else. That's why the most important thing is to translate your music to different sound systems of all kinds. The key word is "Translate" The artist doesn't care if you hear that tone specifically at 4k hz that is only able to be done in their room on their monitors or headphones. The artist cares that you like the song and don't get distracted by a really rumbly or high pitch frequency that makes you want to turn off the song. The wider accessibility we provide with our music, the better. We want as many people as possible to be able to listen to our music and feel the emotion we want to express. This means we want someone who is listening on a crappy car stereo to enjoy our music as much as the person with the $250,000 setup. Musicians want one thing. To make a living doing what we love. How do we do that? We market to people who like the kind of music we're making. We're not marketing to the audiophile who claims to hear 25k hz tones that destroy a mix on their $250,000 setup in their living room made of gold record replicas. We're marketing to the people who like bands that share a similar sound to us in the arrangement of our music, aka Genre and Sub Genre. Hardcore Audiophiles can kiss my butt because they're no better than the elitists who say people who can't shred 16th note triplets at 200 bpm should never pick up a guitar or the guys who say you need at least $25,000 worth of studio equipment to make a good record.

    @rivervaughanmusicstuff5771@rivervaughanmusicstuff5771 Жыл бұрын
    • agree with most if not all of this

      @jacksmith4460@jacksmith4460 Жыл бұрын
  • I've made my first record as a teenager in 1981. The last one, this year. Basic R'n'R', New Wave, Punkish Reggae. Two electric guitars, bass, drums n' vocals (guests here and there with a tenor sax, or horns etc). From the day one, the recording and controlling was done on whatever large studio speakers they had. To hear each instrument as clearly as possible. Then the mixing came... to my shock back in 1981, the detailing of the final mix was done on a car speaker placed in a simple wooden box. When all the band stood in shock, "WTF?", the producer explained "It will be listened on TV speakers, small portable transistors and car stereos. If we make it sound good there, powerful and kicking, it will rock on every system." And it stayed true up to 2022.

    @quirkessence9446@quirkessence94462 жыл бұрын
    • That's right. I make music from 2013 as indie musician / passion not professionally ( I'm a engineer) actually I have 2 Yamaha monitor AND a sub monitor in my home studio. Maybe $1300 bucks. I have the Yamahas because is what other indie record labels here is using. They simply works. Also the $130 Audio Technica monitor works wonder. If the music sound professional on them of course will sound better on the big stereo in my living room.

      @briansotobassist@briansotobassist Жыл бұрын
    • What is the name of your band from 1981. I would be interested in hearing your music.

      @simonplatts7571@simonplatts7571 Жыл бұрын
    • You are so wrong. Don’t compare your music to let’s say pink Floyd or Beatles. Those are mastered with care. Especially SACDs and vinyls which are intended for people who take their music seriously.

      @vitorfernandes651@vitorfernandes651 Жыл бұрын
    • @@vitorfernandes651 Like you could tell the difference. Not do Coke and Pepsi.

      @gary7vn@gary7vn Жыл бұрын
    • @@vitorfernandes651 Yeh but I promise you the mix engineers and mastering engineers would also have cross referenced on poorer playback systems....because thats literally their Job, ...to make a mix that translates

      @jacksmith4460@jacksmith4460 Жыл бұрын
  • Only recently just found your channel. Have to agree what sounds good, sounds good to you as an individual. I have a Fluance RT85 a Chinese tube amp, pre amp and speakers that didn’t break the bank, but sounds amazing in my room to me. Buttery, warm and detailed. WTF do Audiophiles know! Keep up the good work.

    @peterwylie6279@peterwylie6279 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a $300 turntable and $150 cartridge… I believe it was a Yamaha turntable and a Shure V 15 type three… in 1985. (I shudder to think what you would pay today for those exact components… Over $1000… At least) I don’t remember the first cd player I listened to… But it was amazing compared to vinyl. It was the greatest innovation ever! Fast forward to today: “vinyl sounds better than digital!”… are they insane?

    @ralphlivingston894@ralphlivingston894 Жыл бұрын
    • Vinyl have a lot of compromise in sound quality. For example the exterior is denser in data compared to the center in the same disk.

      @GabyEnLAN@GabyEnLAN Жыл бұрын
  • As a self-described ‘audiophile’, the best music reproduction system is the one near you when you want to listen to music. I have worked in high end audio for good portion of my career. I have designed and installed hundreds of 6 figure systems and designed and helped build many treated rooms for clients. I have a very good streaming speaker box for relaxing on the porch and a $50k audio system in my “man cave”. Ya know what? My little box gets more use because it portable and goes with me around the house. Can hear the difference? of course I can. If you have cheap ear buds or great system, just listen and enjoy. it important to remember that IT IS ALL ABOUT THE MUSIC!

    @victorvivaudou132@victorvivaudou1322 жыл бұрын
    • @ColdPetRat2.99 I used to work in Business, I got very good deals on equipment. Besides, if you don’t believe me, I don’t care.

      @victorvivaudou132@victorvivaudou1322 жыл бұрын
    • I think you missed the point of my post.

      @victorvivaudou132@victorvivaudou1322 жыл бұрын
    • I was always more a record collector without paying as much attention to the hardware end as perhaps I should? Don’t know it was long ago. Since about the past few years I’ve gotten more into a putting together a decent stereo system. My system cost around $1,200 give or take, and am very happy with it.

      @jmad627@jmad6272 жыл бұрын
    • You know a douchebag audio tool when they post their resume and how much expensive equipment they have prior to giving their I'm always right comment.

      @ipissed@ipissed2 жыл бұрын
    • @ColdPetRat2.99 I don't know what planet you live one. My set-up is around 25k and of that, 12k is for the speaker components alone. The fact that I bought the components and built the speakers myself, means that they equate to speakers +50k. A good friend of mine built a dedicated listening house in the garden and the audio components alone were +600k.

      @Frups12345678@Frups123456782 жыл бұрын
  • A music lover listens to his records on his equipment, while an audiophile listens to his equipment playing his records.

    @VincentW2@VincentW22 жыл бұрын
    • If you are listening to an LP, you hear the cackles and pops for a few seconds then the music does its magic and they dissapear. I love music.

      @micheltremblay4774@micheltremblay47742 жыл бұрын
    • @@micheltremblay4774 unless your record pressing plant lowered volume to get better dynamics, making crackles audible on acoustic-guitar songs

      @TheWeirdAlley@TheWeirdAlley2 жыл бұрын
    • I guess I'm just listening to tunes on mp3 files lol

      @comdrive3865@comdrive3865 Жыл бұрын
  • I saw your video for the first time and it altered my life in so many ways. I can agree with all things you've said about audiophile "crap". Your considerations are great and I'll describe them just like you. I'll be humble with the word "change my life" in this instance, but in many ways, like eco-politics of the brands and other stuff. Thank you for your work, Man.

    @Kam3L8@Kam3L8 Жыл бұрын
  • Hey Randy @cheapaudioman I really love your videos. They really do ground me in reality without dipping into the more iffy parts of the audiophile community. I started not too long ago when a friend gave me a SHP9500 and I was opened to a whole new world of sound. I went to my local audiophile store and tried out as many headphones as possible and found that I loved the DT 900 Pro X the most. There were occurrences in the audiophile group where people told me that planars are objectively better when I insisted that it was purely subjective. Then I got told Metallica and all the other music I listened to was trash and I need to listen to “audiophile music” like Hotel California or some Beethoven recordings. At first I thought people you mentioned were an extreme minority. But turns out I’ve ran into a lot of people that you’ve mentioned in this video!

    @JL-ef7bh@JL-ef7bh5 ай бұрын
  • I can attest as former recording artist. We did a lot of work on Yamaha monitors. Then demoed on jbl l100 for smiles, but the final mix was tweaked using the stock stereo in my guitar players 1980s Chrysler k-car station wagon. Lol. You want to build a fan base? You don't mix for a 10k audiophile system that only a few people actually listen to your music on. You grab the headphones with the orange foam, the crap car, and the old boom box cassette player and when it sounds as best it can there, you know you have something for the masses!

    @erics.4113@erics.41132 жыл бұрын
    • Thank you I was ready say the same they tried all the scenarios. Henson Studio still had a car outside till recently. Leland Sklar's video at talks about that on this video right at :45 - :55 second mark of this kzhead.info/sun/l86HoseAgYJqh5E/bejne.html

      @DBrownCo@DBrownCo2 жыл бұрын
    • This. This exactly.

      @josephchamberlain3681@josephchamberlain36812 жыл бұрын
    • Thanks. A point I was going to make. Most people aren't snobby about their sound systems and listen on ear buds or little all in one units. The music has to be mixed to sound fine on those systems. The movie "Once" (a great movie) has that process shown.

      @jonathanreich6360@jonathanreich63602 жыл бұрын
    • It's quite logical actually 😂

      @regis_red@regis_red2 жыл бұрын
    • You know the magic.....Berry Gordy of Motown game use to mix his music to sound good in a car system, because that’s how mainstream listens to it!

      @keithgilliard9191@keithgilliard91912 жыл бұрын
  • So true, Randy, so true! One of my pet hates is the expression "mid-fi". 40 years ago, when I got into this hobby, it didn't exist; entry-level separates were considered hi-fi too. Somewhere along the line, some twerp with too much money invented the term as a put-down on lesser mortals whose gear cost less than theirs, and all the other snobs liked the idea and ran with it.

    @thisisnev@thisisnev2 жыл бұрын
    • That's true. A lot of 'stuff' is actually very capable. Having said that, to have something very nice will lift everything else and have it going as best it can eg a really nice cartridge or whatever. There are loads of tweaks you can do to lift mid-fi, so-called. The mid-fi goes the other way too-plasticky or low material output from manufacturers to boost their higher-priced ranges. I always think, if you feel your stereo is 'underperforming' , maybe you're listening when you're tired, distracted, preoccupied with the equipment or you need a music switch. Listen to music on something else for a bit to arrest that slide. I actually sometimes enjoy music on youtube via a Cyrus soundkey into akg550 headphones often a fair bit more than hooking everything up.

      @johnhead3431@johnhead34312 жыл бұрын
    • Cyrus sound key £50, AKG K550 £50 second hand, pads are replaceable. Bargain I reckon, and i use them daily. Brands that i guess are called mid-fi would be NAD, Rotel etc. They can sound clanky. The only Chinese brand I have is Audio GD. I think they are very good to my ears/ mind and it's worth saying there's a relationship between the mind and ears

      @johnhead3431@johnhead34312 жыл бұрын
    • I find the same to be true of "hifi". It has become meaningless.

      @jimshaw899@jimshaw8992 жыл бұрын
    • Pro-sumer, chi-fi, entry level. All silly. We all hear different too, having a go on measuring headphones can show you how different visually.

      @ThePuka@ThePuka2 жыл бұрын
    • You can get better audio equipment by spending a lot of money but you hit the wall of diminishing returns for far less now days. Then again it depends if you even consider accuracy as being better. My old much cheaper set up sounded better than what I have now when I was listening to nothing but rock n roll with less than stellar production. That's because I made a surround sound setup consisting of gear used for live rock and roll so surprise surprise. Really bright tweeters aren't my thing but if you listen to a lot of female Jazz vocals a Klipsch setup can make them sound amazing. Some albums I prefer listening to on my 350$ near field Edifiers over my multi-thousand dollar system. It all kind of depends on taste. If you want a system that does everything really well though you want gear that measures accurate . There's definitely a lot of stuff out there punching way lower than their price point and vice versa. Unless you make a lot of money the improvement you can get with really expensive gear isn't worth it. Most people would get a bigger improvement just learning to set it up properly. DSP will probably make that extra cost unjustified before long for anything other stronger materials or nice finishes.

      @bigcrackrock@bigcrackrock2 жыл бұрын
  • It was a pure pleasure to watch this video and over your left shoulder is a zen dac. Thanks for walking the walk. I bought mine on your recommendation

    @texasbassranger@texasbassranger9 ай бұрын
  • Bro, awesome vid! I guess that is why I have kept my old school system that I got when I was in the military. I added a digital tuner so I can get some streaming but the system is old school. My audio/video, I have a new receiver but my speakers are Sansui's that I bought back in 82 and it sounds pretty good. Today is crazy, and "high fi" like you said, is freaking out of touch for most people, and sometimes you got some people who think they know it all. Anyway keep up the great work!

    @lpsalsaman@lpsalsaman Жыл бұрын
  • 4:28 I'm an Audio Engineer. Artists generally have very minor input on the actual mix/master of the song and don't really understand what we're doing. All they know is if it sounds nice or not and feedback from them is generally something very vague like "can you make this part a bit louder". They almost always listen on very consumer-level devices, and even their studio monitors are generally entry level shitboxes. If they have monitors at all. The only exception to this that I can think of are EDM guys who generally mix and master their own stuff.

    @NathanOrlick@NathanOrlick Жыл бұрын
    • I'm an Audio Engineer who is also an artist. Many times I send my stuff to other mixing engineers because mixing my own stuff feels weird. I do know what they are doing and they do accept input. And I am recording punk rock. On the other hand, I have dealt with the typical annoying person who wants to give input without having a basic grasp on what is going on so, I understand that frustration. However, there is a normalization of snobbism in the audio tech scene. Many engineers think everyone else is dumb except for them. It is a bad habit that has to be dealt with. Artists are getting more and more knowledgeable with time due to how accessible music production is in comparison to 20 years ago. Your comment says a lot about the kind of artists you are specifically not about the general production scene.

      @maskingtables@maskingtables Жыл бұрын
    • @@maskingtables I've worked with hundreds of artists, mixed and mastered thousands of songs and have millions of views on stuff I've worked on. So I don't know what you think my comment says about the artists I work with other than that they're very talented.

      @NathanOrlick@NathanOrlick Жыл бұрын
    • @@NathanOrlick although not a one size fits all obviously, I feel like your assessment is pretty spot on. As an amateur musician that has recorded a few times, although we did have input on mix/mastering, theres not a lot of input even needed on our end other than something possibly feeling slightly buried in the mix. I didn't understand everything involved although they were more than happy to explain when we showed interest out of just a general appreciation of the process. Definitely not something you learn overnight and I have a lot of respect for that process. Audio engineers I have dealt with have all been a pleasure to work with. I think small live venue sound guys can have the reputation for being arrogant but I've never really heard that being the case studio wise. Theres definitely a reason you see very few major artists with engineering credits on their albums, it's just not something the average musician knows unless they have ventured down that road themselves.

      @letsplayclassicgames5024@letsplayclassicgames5024 Жыл бұрын
    • @@letsplayclassicgames5024 Cheers bro! And you got it, it's a specialty like any other. A great engineer should be able to understand the emotional core of what the song is about and maximise that on the way to the finish line. It's our job to make the artists vision a reality without bogging them down with a load of technical bullshit that they shouldn't have to worry about in the first place so that they can lean more heavily into their creativity and focus on things like marketing, videos, live shows etc.

      @NathanOrlick@NathanOrlick Жыл бұрын
    • I recently saw a picture of Paul McCartney listening to music. On an older iPhone.

      @Ozymandias1@Ozymandias1 Жыл бұрын
  • Guttenberg had a great video interviewing a sound engineer in New York. It was a couple videos actually, very enlightening about mastering, compression if you want to know more about how the sausage is made. Another thing is that a LOT of musicians have terrible hearing loss. They are constantly exposed to high volume levels.

    @jctai100@jctai1002 жыл бұрын
    • Beethoven wrote some of his best work damn near deaf and plagued with tinnitus. When the audience is on their feet applauding, he could say that it was how the artist intended.

      @Flarptube@Flarptube2 жыл бұрын
    • Have not been through the "sausage making" process. On a broadcast useage basis, a different end user story. As a young man, I worked [low level engineering, late 60's/early 70's] at several minor mrkt FM stations whose formats were MOR & Rock. I was amazed at the vol. levels ["11"?] that some dj's would run the control monitors during their [usually six hours] shift. Despite the extensive sound damping acoustics utilized within the broadcast booth, one could 'hear' what was being played before one walked in the lobby. I've no idea what hearing damage unfolded....looking back. One station used JBL 100'S [wall mounted, unknown Amp] that would emit thunder during 6 to midnight shift. Louder than the combined forced air blowers of a 20kw FM + 5kw AM transmitter in an adjacent room. Ah, reflection(s).

      @samrapheal1828@samrapheal18282 жыл бұрын
    • That video got re-uploaded like 3 times because he mocked another audiophile you tubers wife. Basically calling her opinion dumb because she is a women

      @santiagoaguilar8429@santiagoaguilar84292 жыл бұрын
    • @@Flarptube I feel like music composition and audio mastering are two very different things, in which one is far more reliant on hearing than the other. The other one is more reliant on creativity and intuition which comes straight from the brain.

      @k-leb4671@k-leb46712 жыл бұрын
  • One of my top favorite videos I have watched recently. Thanks!

    @Lyrici17@Lyrici17 Жыл бұрын
  • As this was my first introduction to your channel as I have been researching home audio - I am now a sub

    @EvilTwinTT@EvilTwinTT Жыл бұрын
  • As someone who has recorded quite a bit, often times we will get emailed WAV files and each of us will listen to the tracks on our own gear. I’ve listened in my car, in my wife’s car, on my laptop, on my phone, and sometimes even on a proper pair of speakers. “As the artist intended”: I was probably drinking when I recorded. We intend it to be enjoyed, full stop.

    @ephektz@ephektz2 жыл бұрын
    • Same here. I’m a drummer. I go into a recording session with a certain way I want my stuff to sound and cut through the mix but as long as I can hear everything I played within a certain general style it’s all good. I’m not a mastering engineer. I say “here’s a reference track (in any file format or quality ) now make me sound like that.” My job is to play drums not to master tracks. That guy is the “Artist” with the real “intention.”

      @sameinsohn6187@sameinsohn61872 жыл бұрын
    • Same. With 30 years as a professional drummer under my belt I can confirm that in my experience at least the recording process involves many people's ideas and there are always compromises to be made. Thanks for what you do Randy! Love your videos and I've learned a lot from them! Cheers from the east coast of Canada!

      @tgdrumbeat@tgdrumbeat2 жыл бұрын
    • Almost all recordings sound better after a couple of 40 ounce Colt 45s.

      @rking6247@rking62472 жыл бұрын
    • @@rking6247 My fingers don’t seem to move the same without a couple pours in them.

      @ephektz@ephektz2 жыл бұрын
    • I saw another reviewer say I’m missing the magic if I don’t spend 23k on a dac😆

      @2951jake@2951jake2 жыл бұрын
  • Glad I’m not the only person that has these opinions on being a “true audiophile”… If I have to spend $50,000 to be a true audiophile, I’ll have to pass… another great video!

    @scottrogers64@scottrogers642 жыл бұрын
    • Knowing when something is "set up" correctly is the what you are looking for, not how much something costs, but what it capability is.

      @ranbymonkeys2384@ranbymonkeys23842 жыл бұрын
    • An audiophile can still be happy with Q Acoustics 3020i speakers and an inexpensive 2 channel integrated amplifier. I have 3020is and they sound nice. I want to try the Concept 500s. I prefer speakers that are a good balance between musical and analytical and a well-built class AB transistor amplifier.

      @davidperry4013@davidperry40132 жыл бұрын
    • @@davidperry4013 Where do you put your speakers in the room you listen to them?

      @ranbymonkeys2384@ranbymonkeys23842 жыл бұрын
    • You're right. You don't have to spend $50K. That's why I spent 120K. When the speakers disappear and you've got a 180 degree sound stage, with full depth voicing, you're finally there. Your ears will justify (most times) sound quality changes no matter the bucks spent on serious improvements. Given this, you do make a few good comments.

      @mikeunsworth3266@mikeunsworth32662 жыл бұрын
    • @@mikeunsworth3266 I got that done for $1,500.

      @ranbymonkeys2384@ranbymonkeys23842 жыл бұрын
  • As an ex recording studio owner/producer/engineer for 4 decades, you may be surprised to hear that I agree with you! I have definitely heard the clear difference between very high end DACs and other gear, but that’s in the studio where recordings start. Once the mix is done and sent out to a mastering house, that’s as good as the public will ever hear it. Even in the studio, much like professional race cars, it takes huge dollars to make a tiny difference. In the “audiophile” world, many of the self proclaimed a-philes would not hear such subtle differences. People should buy what sounds good to them when they hear it, not when they read about it or see a flashy ad. My home systems are all decent, but not what some would consider high end and I’d have it no other way, because I’m not trying to impress anyone with a list of fancy gear.

    @Sunshinecoastphotography@Sunshinecoastphotography Жыл бұрын
    • You can get a delightful and full listening experience for not a lot of money. All it takes is just a little bit of research.

      @bcj842@bcj842 Жыл бұрын
    • In my experience these audiophiles as you say don’t just buy from a catalog, they read reviews and then generally visit shops for demos, the higher end they go the dealers come to them

      @frankcousins7655@frankcousins7655 Жыл бұрын
  • Great video! This brought a lot of the questions I had to light. Thank you

    @jlwade87@jlwade87 Жыл бұрын
  • The group you're talking about would more properly be termed "gear heads" rather than "audiophiles". For them, it's all about the equipment. And you are spot on about what the artists want their music to sound like. Just look inside the fold open liner of The James Gang's second album "James Gang Rides Again". You'll find the words, "Made loud to be played loud". If that doesn't say it, nothing does!

    @hobo1452@hobo14522 жыл бұрын
    • I enjoyed playing guitar more when I knew nothing about gear, then I bought gear for thousands of dollars and lost interest in the playing and focussed on gear only. I hate myself for that.

      @Whydoyoureadme@Whydoyoureadme2 жыл бұрын
    • This "gear over direct experience" thing is oddly dehumanizing. It's like a mental disease or something. I know people who are like this (including myself 5+ years ago) and they always seem to make assumptions of reality that just don't line up with, well, reality. I'm into psychology and I do ridiculous amounts of research, introspection, and reflection, so I've been trying to get to the bottom of this and figure out the source. Right now my sights are on the concept of social engineering as the main culprit. A symptom of many deep-rooted learned problems (as in, not naturally present without specific outside influences) that are unconsciously passed down through generations. Thank god there are many people these days that are becoming self-aware enough to break these cycles. Without them, humanity would be royally screwed. I have hope.

      @mikeexits@mikeexits2 жыл бұрын
    • Actually, Audiophiles are those who obsess about music and the gear. If you're just all about the music, then you're a music lover, not an Audiophile.

      @carlosoliveira-rc2xt@carlosoliveira-rc2xt2 жыл бұрын
    • You need a good set to play music loud enjouably.

      @fgroen1225@fgroen12252 жыл бұрын
    • Boy do i love that lp , good memories my Jr. high school year! Love the photos!

      @jackwezesa1081@jackwezesa10812 жыл бұрын
  • I have been spending more and more time just toying with the idea that we're all still children and that the emotions behind our actions and words are not that different. This is very apparent with arguments and especially subjective ones. Every kid I've met will say they don't like something they've never seen, eaten and on and on. The major difference, sometimes, is the level of complexity and layering in the sentences chose to "support" their arguments. It's so funny. Great rant!

    @masterxyr@masterxyr2 жыл бұрын
    • "I have been spending more and more time just toying with the idea that we're all still children" That was the major reason to find a way to become mature, instead of just being an adult. I saw 30-60 year old people insecure and lost. But you can bet off they will try to give you advice.

      @greatbullet7372@greatbullet73722 жыл бұрын
    • yeah so true! I've been thinking about the same thing... and it happens to all of us. sometimes I think I'm mature, but then I face some situation that makes my inner child surface, and later in hindsight I'm so embarrassed I acted that way! and it happens a lot in trivial arguments too, I think I'm a know it all and then I face the hard truth. I'm a young adult, but you see people who are full grown adults and do this too. being a kid is a lot like being an unfiltered human hahah

      @adrvapor9433@adrvapor94332 жыл бұрын
    • @@adrvapor9433 I'll always be keeping myself in check :)

      @masterxyr@masterxyr2 жыл бұрын
    • "mother, as you are a *rational* human being, i'll presume this was *not* how you INTENDED my meal to taste, hmm?"

      @Dafoodmaster@Dafoodmaster2 жыл бұрын
  • This rant is exactly why I subscribed to your channel. Love it!

    @gooseman025@gooseman025 Жыл бұрын
  • I was thinking I wouldn't be able to find an actual result from searching "best speakers for pc" on a whim. I figured I'd at least get a starting point. Nothing but clearly sponsored vids and paid for advertisement from people who don't care. Then I saw you. Everything's different about your thumbnail and title. No superficial pleasantries, just straight to the point. I like that. Your perspective's on point too. Gonna check out some of your other videos to see if I can find something worth having. :)

    @trajectoryunown@trajectoryunown Жыл бұрын
  • Excellent! I was an Audiophile for most of my life... Then I started to learn how to play guitar. Not just love listening to music, but love creating it. Trying different picks, strings, messing with the controls of my amps and pedals, I could make it sound any of millions of ways. Your favorite recording of say Gimme Shelter, or Smells like Teen Spirit, or All along the Watchtower... lotta talent there, but microscopic details of how that guitar sounded? Keith, Kurt, and Jimi were all just loving whatever it sounded like that day. It was different at the next gig. The studio recording is just one of those days. Now I have discovered how much of a dufus I was for all those years... Listen and enjoy... and definitely don't buy 1,500 dollar audio cables!

    @AgentJayZ@AgentJayZ2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly, and if you listen to most musicians talk about their recordings or live sound most aren't happy with the final product the fans hold sacrosanct

      @ernestalcala4369@ernestalcala4369 Жыл бұрын
    • I've said for a long time that I think audiophiles are overcompensating for the fact that they can't play, read, or write music themselves. It's interesting that you started to think differently once you started playing music on your own :)

      @lantron123@lantron123 Жыл бұрын
    • I think being a sort of entry level audiophile is a pretty good place to be. Don't be obsessive but there's nothing wrong with spending a few hundred quid on a good set of headphones or studio monitors.

      @elhomo6406@elhomo6406 Жыл бұрын
    • I discovered the world of audiophilia and hifi after becoming a sound engineer. I can recognize the advantages of high end equipment but at the end of the day, the laws of physics don't change. It's all a matter of how you choose to color (distort/filter) or not the original signal, which is almost entirely digitally processed since the 90's anyway. You can only do so much to a summed waveform. The real fun is the recording and mixing, where all the audiophiles should really put their ears

      @AvAfanfromfrance@AvAfanfromfrance Жыл бұрын
    • Yeah but a lot of people want to get a particular sound and to get that sound the best way is to use the same equipment as was used for the recording. Either that or modellers. Sure Kurt was spontaneous live but with Andy Wallace mixing I must imagine the process being cerebral rather than off the cuff.

      @malmstring@malmstring Жыл бұрын
  • I'm always amazed as a young person who grew up with vinyl (many years ago LOL) and all my albums survived and I still listen to them on my " barely decent" turntable. The only thing we really followed was a clean record, a good needle. keeping them away from sunlight and handling them on the edges only. A audiophile would be appalled at my set up, but my music plays wonderful and my speakers deliver me great music everytime 🎶

    @jackielh1@jackielh1 Жыл бұрын
    • I was thinking the same thing and I was wondering if maybe using analog equipment just sounds better to us because we are old and that is how we heard the music growing up. I am sure an audiophile would also be appalled at my equipment but I personally think it sounds fantastic. I never think of this "hobby" as a way of trying to produce the highest quality sound as much as recapturing some of the joy of finding records on vinyl, listening to an entire album in one sitting, the artwork on the covers etc.

      @richdaley9982@richdaley9982 Жыл бұрын
    • It's also curious that even on the most expensive, state-of-the-art, 'high end' audiophile quality audio equipment, they still have ANALOGUE audio inputs!? Some obscenely expensive audio equipment even have Phono inputs for that rickety, 40+yo 'barely decent' turntable to plug into! What does that tell you? 🤣🤣

      @ozymandias7940@ozymandias7940 Жыл бұрын
    • @@ozymandias7940 I own an old Sugden amp (pre/power comb.), a Thorens 125 II with Hadcock GH 228 arm, an ADC cartridge, pair of Tannoy Eatons, AKG K340, a Revoxx B77 R2R and a a Studer A721 cassette. All bought second hand. Very good listening experience with these so no need to upgrade to modern state of the art expensive "audiophile" equipment.

      @studer3500@studer3500 Жыл бұрын
    • What is your setup?

      @peterlorenzo615@peterlorenzo615 Жыл бұрын
  • Genuinely enjoyed this video, first I’ve seen of you but subscribed almost immediately

    @prolapser@prolapser Жыл бұрын
  • Oh wow! So I'm only in about 2 mins and I'm already subscribed, I like the way you think....no bulls**t, period. But then, I push "subscribe" and then I see that little note that shows you actually care???!!! I'm all in! Thank you!

    @fuerzademapuche2532@fuerzademapuche2532 Жыл бұрын
  • Can attest that it’s common to do the “car test” during mixing/mastering. The thinking is that if it sounds good there, it’ll sound good most anywhere.

    @andrewharrell6261@andrewharrell62612 жыл бұрын
    • Can't be blowing out the car speakers the first time the bass or kick comes in.

      @legacyShredder1@legacyShredder12 жыл бұрын
    • the thing about car speakers that i find is that they are most balanced towards too much bass, so much so that it makes my ears hurt, and for some reason the singin voices in some car speakers get lost, and some cars dont even have tweeters so forget about that crisp clean clear cymbal crash

      @ernestochang1744@ernestochang17442 жыл бұрын
    • @@ernestochang1744 It depends on the speakers. I mixed a song these last few days, and I listened it in the car. I heard some awful frequencies, which were even more pronounced when I later listened through my old Sennheiser HD485 headphones. I scooped out those frequencies, and now it sounds much better. However, on my humble hi-fi system, I heard that there was a bit too much high end on the vocals and the snare, and that's an easy fix too. Anyway, the car test works really well, but it's a good idea to cross reference the mix on several speakers and headphones.

      @nedim_guitar@nedim_guitar Жыл бұрын
    • Plus, music is most commonly listened to in cars. So if it sounds good in a car, it will likely be listened to.

      @femali@femali Жыл бұрын
    • @@femali me personally i dont think car speakers are a good indication of how music will sound, only casuals who dont care much for sound quality would go with factory car speakers, then again i havent turned on my cars speakers in well over 4 years neither have i bothered to buy upgraded car speakers/ amps its just a waste of money id rather take a hifi pair of headphones or nice Adams audio v7 speakers

      @ernestochang1744@ernestochang1744 Жыл бұрын
  • “Not how the artist intended it”? What are they even talking about? A fundamental concept in audio engineering is getting your mixes to sound good on any system…that’s kind of what separates the pros from the hobbyists.

    @h3lio5@h3lio52 жыл бұрын
    • I guess "how the artist intended it" actually means "however the final mix sounds on any speakers ever" lol. I'd probably make an exception for speakers/sound systems that have such bad acoustics and frequency responses that they are unpleasant to listen to (for example, very specific ranges of harsh high frequencies present in certain album mixing styles and rattling car frames from bass, both of which unfortunately apply to my car lol).

      @mikeexits@mikeexits2 жыл бұрын
    • This. Even for Daft Punk's first album, Homework, the songs were played out on a ghettoblaster because "if it sounds good on this, it'll sound good on anything," and this is *Daft Punk* we're talking about

      @foreverfuturebound@foreverfuturebound2 жыл бұрын
    • It has long been advised that when mixing a track of music that the mix should be previewed on a wide range of sound systems, e.g., car audio, hi-fi speakers, consumer ear buds, as an MP3, etc. The infamous Yamaha NS10 speakers (or a clone such as the Avantone Pro CLA10) have been widely used in professional studios as secondary monitors, not because they are accurate but because they have a sound more typical of a mediocre home stereo speaker.

      @avsystem3142@avsystem31422 жыл бұрын
    • For many years power station studios used to play the final mix in an old car on a mono cassette player just to see if it sounded ok

      @nikkic36@nikkic362 жыл бұрын
    • YES! It is ALL a compromise. A good engineer will have the mix/master sound good on any system where the bass isn't booming or the snare isn't overpowering all the other tracks, or the vocal isn't lost in the mix....for example.

      @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene@WildernessMusic_GentleSerene2 жыл бұрын
  • The first lesson I learned with this hobby is that if the ad says ‘audiophile’ more then once or twice, its probably a waste of money. Hell, if it says it even once it’s probably a waste of money.

    @Wigglyairwizard@Wigglyairwizard9 ай бұрын
  • I really thank you for this video because you basically speak from my heart. I was always someone who made some kind of Frankenstein audio system out of whatever was available on the used market within my budget and seemed decent enough. People think that I am crazy and perhaps they are right. But whoever listened to my sound systems was always extremely impressed and that is not even specific to a certain genre of music. So in a nutshell yes, it kinda is like you get what you pay for but on the other hand if you are a little bit smart about it, spot and leave out all the snake oil, you should be able, even for a grand or something, to put together something that sounds rather decent. My favorite quote of yours was by the way when you said like you're not a professional but you have ears. This is exactly the way I see it! Follow your ears, not your bank account!

    @danielengelthaler7987@danielengelthaler7987 Жыл бұрын
  • I was once told by someone who does music mastering "Listen to your music on the monitors in a studio, the Sony MDR7506, your favorite headphones, some apple earbuds, something samsung includes with their phones, and some airpods or whatever is popular, because most of your market isn't listening to it on anything remotely like what you hear in a studio. Try to understand it from every level from the studio, down to the person who only has the budget for the phone they listen to it on, and the included crackly earbuds."

    @rolfathan@rolfathan2 жыл бұрын
    • You should listen to your music the way you normally do which means if you're in the car/truck a lot, then consider just improving the sound by some aftermarket speakers & maybe an amp but if you're a college kid who rides a bike, then your earbuds are going to be your HiFi connection and they can be improved. I had a set of Bose buds which I ended up giving to my son for his work and he only uses his phone. He loves them. Back in the early 80's, I once owned a set of Minimus 50's from Radio Shack. They were metal enclosures with 4" woofer & 1" radial tweeter. My friend who had (at the time) a $5,000 quad Sansui system he got from a PX in Germany in the early 70's was so impressed by how good the Minimus 50's sounded at my house, told me he later bought a pair for his workshop. He was more proud of those than his 380 watt/channel quad system. Go figure.

      @molochsorcery4357@molochsorcery43572 жыл бұрын
  • As an audio engineer who has recorded much music straight into my PC using some nice microphones and preamps but everything else software-based, I have gotten into “spirited debates“ with the equivalent of “audiophiles“ in my world, who swear that everything has to be analog/ “old-school”, otherwise it’s garbage. I’ve actually started lying to some of these “purists”, saying that I recorded it all on tape, going so far as to add to tape hiss back in using my tape-sim plug-ins. They could never tell the difference.

    @McMillanScottish@McMillanScottish2 жыл бұрын
    • So true! Next time serve them RC cola and tell them it's "the real thing". Will they notice? Not in a million years.

      @gary7vn@gary7vn Жыл бұрын
    • Don't forget that the software version of the 1960s Beatles EMI studio tape recorder has parameters for "added 50 cycle hum" and "added wow and flutter" to make it "authentic".

      @rockyhill9965@rockyhill9965 Жыл бұрын
    • Lol sounds like you have worked with Jack White a few times , hes right into that ,, he loves his real to reals

      @mandrakeblackstone5838@mandrakeblackstone58382 ай бұрын
  • This is one of the best KZhead videos I've seen. And I couldn't agree more. You got my like and subscribe. 100%

    @Dgfatz@Dgfatz Жыл бұрын
  • Good video Randy! So true. Some of the best advise I have received re: stereo gear was this - the more you spend, the less the differences in sound as you go up in cost. There is a point of diminishing returns. The most important thing is not how much you spend on equipment. The most important thing is that you enjoy listening to your music.

    @SamuelBarrPhotography@SamuelBarrPhotography2 жыл бұрын
    • It is basically the same with most things in life. I am not certain that you are into soccer, but it makes a good analogy. You can get a decent player for a million, but if you want 5% more capability, you probably have to pay 5 millions. If you want an additional 2% capability, then you probably have to spend 10 million and if you want an additional 1% capability like with top players like Haaland, Lewandowski, Mbappe etc, the you have to pay 100 million. The key thing is if it is worth it...

      @Frups12345678@Frups123456782 жыл бұрын
  • It's refreshing to see someone straight talking and cutting through the nonsense some of these so called audio files go on about, everyone hears things differently so if your hi-fi sounds good to you then you're sorted regardless of the price...

    @henryhartley9993@henryhartley9993 Жыл бұрын
    • Everyone hears things differently...what a load of CRAP!!! Some people have better hearing than others but our ears all work the same way, unless you have bionic ears. The golden ears want you to believe that their hearing is so keen, so exquisite, that they can hear tiny nuances of reproduced sound too elusive for the rest of us. Absolutely not true. Anyone without actual hearing impairment can hear what they hear, but only those with training and experience know what to make of it, how to interpret it. Thus, if a loudspeaker has a huge dip at 3 kHz, it will not sound like one with flat response to any ear, golden or tin, but only the experienced ear will quickly identify the problem. It's like an automobile mechanic listening to engine sounds and knowing almost instantly what's wrong. His hearing is no keener than yours, he just knows what to listen for. You could do it too if you had dealt with as many engines as he has.

      @thegoat164@thegoat164 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thegoat164 I have diamond ears even tho I am not one of those audio files

      @mercyveritas1125@mercyveritas1125 Жыл бұрын
    • @@thegoat164 the shape of the ear affects how you hear things, not just the volume at which you hear them. Since people have different ears, they do literally hear things differently.

      @_skud@_skud Жыл бұрын
  • I love how you commented on the mono block amp's always sitting on the floor! As well as "can't you get them up on a rack or something". I understand some of those amps are ginormous and way half a ton, but some of them I think you'd be able to get up on a rack or just get them off the floor. I'm pretty sure I left the same comment several months ago when I watched this video. Keep up the good work buddy.

    @philmccracken2012@philmccracken2012 Жыл бұрын
  • They are! During one of your reviews for a pair of KOSS headphones you said “Not for the money, they’re just great headphones period!” It was so refreshing to hear you say that.

    @WVandellHarris@WVandellHarris Жыл бұрын
  • Get em Randy! This is why I follow you, Darko and Andrew Robinson. You are all very different, but you all just care about music and none of the BS. Keep it up!

    @NathanPallas@NathanPallas2 жыл бұрын
    • Yep these 3 I trust too

      @ppwoodcock@ppwoodcock2 жыл бұрын
    • I think also may add Zero Fidelity? He sounds pretty impartial to me.

      @aiCorner@aiCorner2 жыл бұрын
    • I'm an audiophile(!), but Randy is correct on all points. I've got to where I am by buying stuff second hand and if I hear an improvement (or just like it for whatever reason) I keep it and sell on what I had previously. After a few iterations I'm very happy where I'm at, I now have the sound I want in my room. I've gone backwards before, luckily my old gear I hadn't sold yet and put that back in. Yes I've taken some loses, but to me that is the cost of playing around and having fun, so I'm good with that.

      @nacarp2000@nacarp20002 жыл бұрын
  • "It's your music, you can listen to it however you want to". Best statement!! Ultimately it's your music, your gear, your ears. It's going to be what YOU like. It's all subjective! Great video!

    @1200supraman@1200supraman2 жыл бұрын
    • My gear sounds good to my ears...that's all that matters!

      @jimmyroocoh8696@jimmyroocoh86962 жыл бұрын
  • You my friend made me laugh SO HARD! Nice job.

    @adrianhaselhuber939@adrianhaselhuber939 Жыл бұрын
  • Hahaha! Perfect, really perfect! And to your point 1. I actually happen to record an EP with my band back in the day. The recording studio was a professional one we paid for with our own money. Some bands who actually had some success recorded their LPs in that studio, with that engineer. Well, our drummer was particularly fastidious with how the music should have sounded neutral, hence the engineer recorded the first demo. It was sounding decent in the studio monitors. Then he put it on tape (we were in the early 90s) and said "ok, now you go in your car and put this in your car stereo and tell me how it sounds. Because 100% of the people who will listen to this will not listen to it in this studio". We went in actually my car, with a normal car stereo and it sounded completely flat and basically crap. We went back to the studio, the engineer made all the adjustments he had to do, gave us a new tape and said "Now listen to this". Back in my car, same car stereo, and it sounded great. Artists have no clue what they want, sound engineers do. And they do their magic in a way that it doesn't matter how crap your stereo is, music will still sound decent.

    @111two@111two Жыл бұрын
    • what was your band called?

      @noname-fk6rs@noname-fk6rs3 ай бұрын
    • @@noname-fk6rs in which country do you live?

      @111two@111two3 ай бұрын
    • US@@111two

      @noname-fk6rs@noname-fk6rs3 ай бұрын
    • oh is that the band name

      @noname-fk6rs@noname-fk6rs3 ай бұрын
    • @@noname-fk6rs Unless you know any single name of any single band who made a demo and didn't make it to the charts everywhere in the world OUTSIDE of the US, do you realise you're sounding a bit like a smart arse?

      @111two@111two3 ай бұрын
  • Musician and audio enthusiast here, with recording experience on both analog and digital equipment. Every sound engineer worth his salt will test the final mix : A) Both in stereo AND mono to make sure nothing is out of phase and all instruments are audible. B) From multiple sources and in different acoustic environments to make sure it delivers under all circumstances....that includes cars, portable devices, headphones and yes,mobile phones! C) Noone knows what the artist intented but the artist themselves...often, not even them!

    @KostasHolopain@KostasHolopain2 жыл бұрын
    • I wholly agree with you. I just add one thing is a low cost FM transmitter and walk around the house to see how it sounds on different radios.

      @barryduff9839@barryduff98392 жыл бұрын
    • Keeping Avantone in business. :)

      @kaislate@kaislate2 жыл бұрын
    • This all day.

      @this_is_an_outrage@this_is_an_outrage2 жыл бұрын
  • In the short span being an audiophile, i found out that no piece of audio gear makes more noise compared to other audiophiles

    @swastikprusty@swastikprusty2 жыл бұрын
  • Great Honest Reviews.. i watched a lot of your reviews... and yes.. i agree with u about this... the arguing point is Costs, Experience, Quality ...i bought the 2 set of Moukey 3way + Moukey center speaker + 8inch sub Bestisan + 3 fosi BL20A chained them via pre-out + DJ Audio Mixer ... yah ur right ..cant go wrong with moukey and fosi.. its cheap ..yet provides sound quality.. sounds like heaven when i play music at home... i wanted to go with ELAC as u recommend as well.. but budget is tight...

    @lifeofsam3279@lifeofsam3279 Жыл бұрын
  • Love the video, I have a 5 systems in my home, garage, work shop, Livingroom, office with Deftech, Martin Logan, Paradigm, Polk, Kef, Axiom and speakers I built. The best sound I have is in my office with Fosi mini amp from Amazon ($100.00) connected to a set of Definitive Pro bookshelf or Paradiam Mini monitor 2 that I got for $100.00.

    @ianmacfarlane9240@ianmacfarlane9240 Жыл бұрын
  • I've been into hifi all my life with 30 years of experience learning, testing and trying new things. I have spent entire weekends AB comparing amplifiers DACs, preamps, speakers, players, files, room treatments and setup. The thing is perception is a major factor and it means you can't AB test and fully know if one thing or another is better. As one example I listened to a set of older Polk Audio SDA-2 speakers and I thought they were awful on initial impressions. I changed back to my Q Acoustics Concept 20's that I had been listening to for a few months and though how much better they were. I decided to switch to the Polk's again and give them another shot with some different test tracks and went a month like that. When I went back to my Q Acoustics speakers I hated them, they sounded thin, peaky and bright all of the sudden. The longer you listen to any change in setup the more you get used to the sound and it changes your perception and what you like. So AB testing is a no go for me. Instead I need to listen to any new component my system without interruption for minimum 2 weeks of heavy listening a few hours a day and then decide if I like it or not.

    @practicalguy973@practicalguy9732 жыл бұрын
    • Entertainment Becomes Entrainment!!!

      @fookingsog@fookingsog2 жыл бұрын
    • I have a number of different speakers and they all sound great but different. So I justify it to myself like the differences in good wines. They’re different but they’re all good. Not very scientific. But I get a lot of pleasure from each of my systems.

      @f1flick@f1flick2 жыл бұрын
    • You are absolutely right. I also went into the rabithole, with cheap speakers though, buying speakers, reading about 'better speakers', sell them, buy others, etc. until I ended up with Infinity renaissance 90, and i loved them. Until they broke and I went looking for other speakers. Now I found piega and I like it. But probably, there are better speakers out there, but honestly, i'm sick of buying and selling and prefer to invest my time in tweaking it, improving the room, processor, and enjoy them more!

      @Stan_the_Belgian@Stan_the_Belgian2 жыл бұрын
    • It’s just like buying a new pair of shoes where they’ll never feel as comfortable as your old ones only because they’re different. But once you where them a couple weeks, their feel becomes the new norm.

      @leothelionator@leothelionator2 жыл бұрын
    • My Q Acoustics 2020s [plus a not very expensive sub-woofer] are excellent.

      @simonwood1461@simonwood14612 жыл бұрын
  • Go man go!

    @SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac@SteveGuttenbergAudiophiliac2 жыл бұрын
    • Yea! Go man go!

      @gregiep123@gregiep1232 жыл бұрын
    • Speaking of a guy who has actually sat in on some recording sessions :) Thanks for all your reviews too Steve!

      @jamiejwaters@jamiejwaters2 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, man, go!

      @rking6247@rking62472 жыл бұрын
    • Dude, when Steve Guttenberg throws you a "Go man go!" on a video like this, that's gotta feel good. Love every thing about this video. You're spot on, man. Love that you're keeping it real.

      @moliver21atgmail@moliver21atgmail2 жыл бұрын
    • Heh...writes "The Audiophiliac." Love that you get the snark and don't take yourself seriously, Steve. And thanks for recommending the Chesky sessioned Fred Hersch Trio's 'Dancing in the Dark' album in the ELAC Uni-fi 2.0 UB52 review. That one slipped under the radar. Love that dude's work. His "Live in Europe" CD is on heavy rotation these days. Outstanding stuff.

      @init4fun@init4fun2 жыл бұрын
  • Love your take on "high end". Completely agree, if your speaker has to have special equipment, let the buyer know before hand! Then I will happily factor that into my purchasing decision

    @punkish7@punkish79 ай бұрын
  • i always thought that audiophiles are people that fall easily victim to marketing, it also has this the emperor's new clothes vibe to it. "cant you hear it....? its perfect!" everyone nods in agreement even though they cant hear any difference XD

    @MrBroken030@MrBroken030 Жыл бұрын
    • Good sound is not proportional to high price, however there is a big difference in sound. It just has little to do with price

      @jm_1214@jm_121410 ай бұрын
  • If every speaker measured and sounded the same it would suck. Everyone likes different flavors and everyone likes a certain kind of sound. I love how my speakers sound different from each other. Makes it fun and it’s interesting hearing music over different systems and setups!

    @HomeTheatre101@HomeTheatre1012 жыл бұрын
    • @HomeTheater101 said: "Everyone likes different flavors and everyone likes a certain kind of sound." This is VERY true, but let's call that "flavor" what it *really* is. *_DISTORTION_* There isn't a single piece of equipment on this planet that _doesn't_ somehow distort the original signal.

      @playaspec@playaspec2 жыл бұрын
    • @Lassi Kinnunen 81 But you are forgetting that tone control or EQ are the work of the Devil.

      @scottmichaels1764@scottmichaels17642 жыл бұрын
  • Having done many recordings along the way, one of the first things we do as soon as we get our initial basic mix down is run out to the car park and listen to it on an average system in one of our cars. That way, we can get an idea of how most people will probably hear it. The expensive high-fidelity studio monitors will give you all the fine details, but they don't provide a sense of how it will end up being played to most people. We've used this vital tool to shape many final mixes. I know we're not the only people who do this, so I would argue that many musicians don't intend to tailor their sound to audiophiles, but wish to direct it to the average listener with average equipment who make up the bulk of the market. Quick edit: I paused the video a second too soon. As soon as I finished writing it and started watching again, he explained exactly what I'd described. I was going to delete it, but I thought I should leave it up just to reiterate his point.

    @brett22bt@brett22bt Жыл бұрын
  • This is a great video, alot of important points. The high-end systems I have had consist of things that sound great. I've tried high dollar components only to be disappointed time and time again. Fortunately I sold the items quickly and got my money back.

    @tyoung3455@tyoung34554 ай бұрын
  • I am new to all of this. So thank you.

    @filmboy@filmboy6 ай бұрын
  • Back in the day, a well respected audio magazine swore that plugging a cheap Radio Shack ("Micronta") clock radio into the same electrical outlet as your stereo equipment dramatically improved the sound. Then there was the green marker that, when used around the edges of a CD, allegedly caused the bits to stop leaking (or something) and improved the sound of the CD. These are the types of things that many "audiophiles" considered viable.

    @tablameister@tablameister2 жыл бұрын
    • Pop a audiophile fuse in your plug as well🤣

      @a0r0a7@a0r0a72 жыл бұрын
    • Come on , we are all adults here so you can say "Stereophile" and as far as being "well respected", that just isn't the case considering what you posted as examples plus the other snake oil items some of their "reviewers" endorsed. Yes, they do good measurements on components when they want to but also spew the worst BS imaginable. I have ZERO respect for Atkinson, Serinus and their ilk. They knowingly lie to keep the ad revenue going.

      @davidlong1786@davidlong17862 жыл бұрын
    • I remember the green marker. I recall the idea was that the CD could act like a fibre optic cable with the laser light travelling horizontally through the CD towards the edge of the disc thus interfering with the laser reading the disc. The green ink was meant to absorb that horizontal laser light. At the time I wondered why not use a black pen as it would absorb more wavelengths of light? So I wanted to experiment but did not want to spend $25 at a HiFi store so ended up getting exactly the same green pen (less cheap label) from a stationery store for a few dollars. I also got a black pen from the same maker and range. I didn't notice any difference in the CDs sound. I still have a couple of CDs with green around the edge. As for the black pen - the ink flaked off almost immediately which is why it wasn't used.

      @mddawson1@mddawson12 жыл бұрын
    • @@mddawson1 I remember those green pens very well. As for buying one I like you could not stomach the cost for a pen. On top of that it was just nonsense. Disc played perfectly so it was a gimmick and a powerful one because they certainly did sell. A item made to address a problem that did not exist like so many hifi accessories sadly.

      @a0r0a7@a0r0a72 жыл бұрын
    • @@a0r0a7 Another one that I tried back in the 90s was shorting out the co-axial digital output on my Rotel RCD-855 that was suppose to improve the analog output. Once again I did it on the cheap shorting out an old RCA plug and once again I heard no difference. It obviously did not harm the Rotel as I still use it now. I am pleased to say I never fell for improving a CD players sound by placing a piece of paper under one foot. I do hope that one was a joke.

      @mddawson1@mddawson12 жыл бұрын
  • Preach it son! If it’s enjoyable to you is all that matters. I was an early listener and happy to see your channel is doing great!

    @markcook9084@markcook90842 жыл бұрын
    • Absolutely 100% correct!!!

      @chrisdunaway2562@chrisdunaway25622 жыл бұрын
  • Absolutely love this rant its how I feel! I watching so many videos trying to decide and i hear so often 'speakers are a little warmer' , 'the treble is is a little bright'. Its become such an industry of audiophiles giving their opinions and telling others they are wrong! Bi-wiring does nothing to the ears of the average guy with a system in his lounge who wants to listen to some Black Sabbath after a crap day at work! I gave a store the opportunity to recommend a system for a budget of £1500 he started with an Amp + DAC + Transport = £1900 and this did not have any speakers yet!

    @mytempleofrock@mytempleofrock Жыл бұрын
  • A friend just bought some KEFs today. I can't wait to hear all the hype. I have a pair of second hand Magnat motion 1000s speakers that I bought from the flea market for next to niks and I could not be happier with them

    @duncstarr@duncstarr Жыл бұрын
  • You know an "Audiophile" is full of BS when they tell you you need to spend $3,000 on a pair of 8 foot speaker wires to get good sound.

    @MikeHammer1@MikeHammer12 жыл бұрын
    • Yeah, but at least they'll have the satisfaction of knowing they'll sound as good as $30 cables. :D

      @ayokay123@ayokay1232 жыл бұрын
    • Not when their system cost over usd300k, and if the improvement is 3%, they got themselves 6k petting on the back. 😁

      @andrewlim7751@andrewlim77512 жыл бұрын
    • Certain companies talk about cable/wire "burn-in". Ridiculous.

      @wabbasMEpern@wabbasMEpern2 жыл бұрын
    • Only $3000? I've seen $10,000.

      @frequentlycynical642@frequentlycynical6422 жыл бұрын
    • I have a friend would not buy anything that is too cheap, 3k is too cheap. 😂😂😂

      @andrewlim7751@andrewlim77512 жыл бұрын
  • Randy is spicy this morning. This is going to be good!!!!!!

    @dicmccoy@dicmccoy2 жыл бұрын
    • @Fisher Man It smells like Irish whiskey.

      @longmuskox4194@longmuskox41942 жыл бұрын
    • No, Randy is really very drunk this morning and it was boring to watch him slur his way over the same points. Spend less on booze and you'll have more left for audio gear.

      @hikerpunk2823@hikerpunk28232 жыл бұрын
    • @@hikerpunk2823 Well, I certainly wouldn't call it boring. He was coherent. He wasn't falling over drunk. Regardless, it kept me watching to the end. If I were to speculate, I'd guess he needed a drink to say what needed to be said. The insights addressed in this video are definitely tough to swallow for many. But, I'm glad he used his platform to say it.

      @longmuskox4194@longmuskox41942 жыл бұрын
  • New to the channel - i like your videos so far! But, are you doing a Foster Brooks routine or do you have a couple before you film? Either way, it’s enjoyable and look forward to consuming more.

    @juspat2@juspat2 Жыл бұрын
  • LOL!! I've found myself hunting for older car speakers with a frequency response as close to human hearing range as possible because some of the expensive speakers available now only get down to 70 or 80 hz.

    @jimr5703@jimr5703 Жыл бұрын
  • Beware of audio reviews that sound like wine tastings… “Open and airy” Pairs well with jazz” “Subtle overtones of walnut and MDF”

    @jimhibert@jimhibert2 жыл бұрын
    • Exactly!! 🤣

      @Alamo-cz5xc@Alamo-cz5xc2 жыл бұрын
    • Hey, 'open' and 'airy' are valid and tangible characteristics....

      @kekethetoad@kekethetoad2 жыл бұрын
    • @@kekethetoad I never saw an oscilloscope with an “Open” or Airy” knob. You cannot measure subjective items. They cannot be tangible.

      @jimhibert@jimhibert2 жыл бұрын
    • best comment!

      @DJMARINKOx@DJMARINKOx2 жыл бұрын
    • Just the size shape and acoustic treatments of the room can make these subtle changes in how we listen to a recording on our systems. Yes beware.

      @WildernessMusic_GentleSerene@WildernessMusic_GentleSerene2 жыл бұрын
  • People sometimes confuse Compression in terms of making the audio as loud as possible with an audio compressor. And compression due to the mp3 format and other lossy formats. Those are two completely different types of compression.

    @Bassotronics@Bassotronics2 жыл бұрын
    • Indeed. "Compression" of FILE SIZE is what lossy formats do, while discarding much of the "information content" and fidelity, making them easy to stream (without blowing through a data cap) and portable enough for cheap USB flash drives to hold several hours of music. Audio compression is squeezing the dynamic range between the softest and loudest sounds. When used a little, it can improve the sound, making it a bit fuller (not as thin), and make it easier to listen in noisier environments like cars. But taken to extremes like too many recordings are done today and it makes them all sound like crap, worse than an AM radio turned up to 10. Hopefully recording artists, engineers, and producers will start caring about the quality of the sound instead of just how "loud" it sounds one day soon. I miss the quality recordings from the 1980s that took advantage of the 96dB dynamic range of CDs and made music emotionally impactful.

      @rosswarren436@rosswarren4362 жыл бұрын
    • Mp3 compression? Whaddya mean? Filesize?

      @Firearmerr@Firearmerr2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Firearmerr Yes.

      @Bassotronics@Bassotronics2 жыл бұрын
    • @@Firearmerr for example taking a 16-bit 640MB .wav file and running it through a mp3 encoder with the result being the "best" a mp3 file can be, which is a 320Kbps, 16-bit file, you'll end up with a file about 91 MB or roughly 1/7th the FILE SIZE. To do that, it uses perceptual encoding that throws out much of the nuances of the audio quality. It can still be very listenable and enjoyed, but it is not the level of audio quality of the original at all. Only non-lossy compression schemes like FLAC or ALAC can "crunch" file sizes to about 60% or so, and retain ALL of the audio quality of the original.

      @rosswarren436@rosswarren4362 жыл бұрын
    • There is an even bigger difference in the 'compression' commonly thought of in loudness wars, and compression used in the actual engineering mix process. The latter changes the dynamic perception of the individual instrument.

      @keithmoriyama5421@keithmoriyama54212 жыл бұрын
  • Love how you say MAZEURE instead of MEZZURE! Reminds me of my IA teacher in 1978 named Garland W Reedy

    @slimtimm1@slimtimm1 Жыл бұрын
  • One of the most pleasant things I have heard was an old tape reel machine playing Dave Brubeck's Take Five in an antique shop. It was so warm and rich, full of feeling and spontaneously created deep nostalgia. No idea what machine it was, I wish I had made note of it. Lo fi beat hi fi that day.

    @raksh9@raksh9 Жыл бұрын
    • reel to reel is not lo fi, it's the pinnacle of analogue reproduction... Many audiophiles still use tape machines.. and of course they sound amazing

      @HASHEAVEN@HASHEAVEN Жыл бұрын
    • @@HASHEAVEN I guess I meant that the setup wasn't some giant nautilus speaker monstrosity with Krell amps and Kimber Kables, it was a simple setup with small and old consumer speakers. But you're definitely right about tape reel sound quality.

      @raksh9@raksh9 Жыл бұрын
  • I had a buddy in a popular metal band. His kids were friends with my friends, that kind of thing. Super cool dude. He listened to album mixes through his phone over consumer headphones outside a Wendy’s in a pretty noisy area while our families were having lunch. That album won a Grammy.

    @mygirlfriendismean@mygirlfriendismean2 жыл бұрын
    • Limp Bizkit?📭

      @kshmr_k9@kshmr_k92 жыл бұрын
    • Damn you friends with Dave from Megadeth or something?

      @commisargamerson1666@commisargamerson16662 жыл бұрын
    • @@commisargamerson1666 ha it’s a dude from high on fire.

      @mygirlfriendismean@mygirlfriendismean2 жыл бұрын
  • Spot on. Being in sales myself Im baffled at the ignorance I’ve met visiting hifi-shops. I’ve only met maybe one or two good salesmen in hifi-shops. It’s because the nature of the product draws staff that treat it as a hobby. It’s very difficult to be a great seller when you love your product more than selling in itself. I’m in the market for new speakers so I’ve visited 7 different shops so far. None have asked me what music I want to hear. That’s kind of the first rule of selling, know your customer. Interview them. I hate the term audiophile in general. I listen to music, and I love listening to a good system. Do you get better systems for more money? Often. But diminishing returns start pretty early. Value is subjective but so is music. I’ve had equipment that measures fantastic and sound boring as hell. And I’ve had equipment that measures poorly and engages me to listen for longer sessions. The whole concept of audiophiles is stupid

    @Foppalainen82@Foppalainen82 Жыл бұрын
  • Refreshing. Thank you. Going to listen to my music with a denon sc m40 speakers. 🙏🏽🙏🏽

    @bwanasefunjege3096@bwanasefunjege3096 Жыл бұрын
  • A flat measuring speaker is a good starting point because music is mixed on flat measuring speakers, that doesn't mean a bumpy response is bad. I used studio monitors as my main listening rig for years so I'm probably used to that sound signature now. But yeah flat is as much a signature as any other shape.

    @canepaper967@canepaper967 Жыл бұрын
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