Saturday, 29 October 2022

Blog Post #502: Musings on a decade of audiophilia, maturation, objectivism and the road ahead.

Well guys and gals, this marks post 502 since the start of the blog back in 2012, although articles really only started flowing by 2013. As we are approaching the latter months of 2022, it's amazing to think that a decade has flown by!

Over the years we have touched upon a huge number of audiophile topics. Much of the ideas and experiments over the years have and will continue to serve as the foundation for me in the days ahead as a music lover and "hi-fi" audiophile. Before embarking on this blog, I remember the frustration of feeling entrenched in audiophile obsessions over the fears and uncertainties around things like whether I needed expensive cabling, whether the ethernet switch was deteriorating my audio stream, concerns about the "noise" from my computer, and if for some reason jitter was further destroying my sound. I remember recognizing that none of those anxieties were ever fully addressed or clarified by product manufacturers or the mainstream magazines of the day, and there were little resources out there on YouTube or other websites. Descriptions were vague, and as I recall, nobody ever could clearly express to me what jitter sounded like for example, despite prominent claims. Other than suggesting that handing over money was the solution by buying and "listening for yourself", hobbyists could seem to do nothing else - powerless in the face of dramatic claims.

I remember thinking at one point: "How problematic are these issues, really?!". Given the decades of audio hardware evolution, and in the context of all that we know in the 21st Century about the engineering that has gone into these human-designed and assembled electronic devices, is it reasonable that hobbyist audiophiles seemed to blindly stagger in the dark, typically discussing these things with little facts, or figures, easily drawn into opinions and assumptions that can swing to extremes or seem so idiosyncratic depending on the subjective whims of the reviewer who supposedly "hears" things?

Even where there are measurements (like in the pages of Stereophile), it also seemed odd to me that the objective results appear to be subservient to unsubstantiated subjective comments. If the subjective reviewer heard some "harshness" and the DAC showed higher jitter anomalies, it's not hard to use that as the "attribution theory". But if the DAC is expensive from a prominent name, more likely than not the subjective listener likes it, and the impact of sometimes exceedingly poor measurements appear softened and the device still gets an overall recommendation (look at the measurements for this).

For this post, I hope the reader will indulge me with an opportunity to meander into thoughts that have been bouncing in and out of my mind over the years, and consider expectations over the next decade.

Through the years, I have seen significant shifts not just in my own psychology, but also in the audiophile landscape. In general, I believe audiophiles have become more "enlightened" and reasonable than back in 2012/2013. One area that has clearly changed is the accessibility and ability for consumers to access objective knowledge, the know-how to measure equipment and correlate experiences for ourselves - time permitting, one can learn a huge amount by listening and measuring with the RME ADI-2 Pro seriesE1DA Cosmos ADC and REW or Multitone for example! The hardware and software tools now at our disposal have allowed us to shine light on those dark corners of audiophile uncertainties and "subjectivist" culture in indisputably powerful ways beyond the limits of human auditory perceptions I would not have known a decade back. As it has been said for millennia, "you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free". I would much prefer that than some variant of "spend money and listen for yourself".

Compared to most other hobbies, I think this freedom by knowing the truth is particularly liberating for neurotic audiophiles willing to take the steps beyond feelings, and willing to engage with intellect. Where there is knowledge gained by empirical testing, we begin to walk away in peace from audio pseudoscience, myths, legends, faith in the "high priests" and those who sell snake oil (even when they insist they're not selling serpentine lipids ;-).

Sadly, I've often felt that there are a number of manufacturers out there that purposefully operate in ways that perpetuate FUD and act counter to the growth of knowledgeable hobbyists. This blog is peppered with the names of these companies which I won't mention here, some of them appear to no longer be in the spotlight any more for good reason.

I agree. Mere opinions often point upward in their tendency to magnify extremes but have us remain stationary rather than provide a useful direction to proceed.

What is even more disappointing to me as a hobbyist are the times one needs to speak up against the "mainstream" audiophile press who are supposed to educate and advocate for consumers. There are numerous "journalists" out there basically taking on the role of advertising spokespersons of the Audiophile Industry, sometimes calling upon supposed "experts" in the Industry without acknowledging secondary gains like the financial self-interests of these individuals when they express their opinions. It's sad to see such articles, blogs, podcasts, YouTube videos, presented as opportunities to transmit "knowledge" or "understanding" but end up as nothing more than poorly conceived and frankly unbelievable advertising. Hard questions are rarely asked in most interviews, never mind some of these "journalists" seemingly unable to engage their own basic common sense! Even as rational gains have been made, "infomercials" appear to have been on a growth trajectory over the last decade in audiophilia as videos have become opportunities to monetize; often asking people to pay monthly for early access through services like Patreon.

While audio forums remain places of debate that can get heated, my feeling is that the general demeanor has become more thoughtful with deeper discussions and people willing to take time to explore and test ideas rather than accept claims by faith (at the sites I tend to visit at least). I think as a hobby, there has been maturation among participants linked to healthy skepticism over the last decade. If one has evidence (which can still be falsified of course since nobody's perfect), and remains respectful, there is no reason to avoid being assertive. The potential for continued growth by ultimately seeking wisdom (beyond just knowledge) I believe is the greatest part of character formation we can hope for over time both individually and corporately as a body of audiophiles.

Among the words, photos, graphs, listening tests, and measurements posted over the years, I hope this blog has provided some useful suggestions and hit on fundamental facts as a reflection of the path of "Archimago the Audiophile" at this point in history. The last decade has been a time of intermingling between computer systems, networks, and high quality/high resolution digital audio. Our quality of life has been blessed by the convenience and availability of inexpensive devices achieving levels of fidelity "unheard" of a decade or two back.

This last decade has us witnessing the transition of music playback from purpose-made black box physical media devices to high-resolution computer audio; and with it the freedom to escape the limits of the CD 16/44.1 physical format and lossy MP3 thanks to massively expanded storage to terabytes of data. Though nowhere as popular, DSD/SACD albums have become easier to handle for modern computers, lossy and lossless file format options have expanded (like this), and we've seen a push forward using digital signal processing to achieve better sound quality in our rooms. We can fully transition if one wishes from physical formats to downloadable content, and now cloud-based Internet streaming. This move from an ownership model of the music library into a rental model seems to be working well for many music lovers.

[Mitch Barnett recently sent me a great video showing the "rise and fall" of formats used for audio consumption as a beautiful visual illustration.]

As with computing hardware in general, the deflationary forces of technological innovations have brought down the prices and increased availability of devices like DACs performing at levels of fidelity that are more than likely "perceptually perfect" now. As discussed, luxury "high end" needs not follow price-fidelity correlations.

I have suggested over the years that audio technologies were the first to mature among engineering-based hobbies. These days, it's hard to imagine accurate <20Hz to 20+kHz audio frequency reproduction demanding much cutting-edge R&D engineering dollars. Sure, research dollars can still achieve smaller devices, more power-efficient amps, better speakers and headphones, more powerful and effective DSP algorithms, but are we not well past the point of diminishing returns?


Regardless of exactly how the future plays out in this hobby, what is non-negotiable IMO is the role that modern objective testing must play as its reality-based foundation. While subjective perceptions, "feelings", "impressions", and opinions can and will continue to result in endless discussions (like whether tube or solid-state amps sound "best"), mercifully, the objective pursuit provides a necessary "off ramp" should one desire to distance ourselves from those obsessions and compulsions. Instead of building a faith based on the whims of one's emotional desires (or the desires of some other guy in a magazine or online) that vary as the winds blow, I think it's much better to build our audiophile foundation on discipline and knowledge that allows for verifiable progress based on high fidelity ideals. Of course, eventually enjoyment of music is what matters and I would never suggest one not do a proper home listening evaluation of a product; that's a given which I trust no audiophile would suggest otherwise! But there is something to be said about freedom to "move on" from things that simply make no sense any more like thousand-dollar audio cables, "quantum" products, and the countless tweaks that demand evidence before any serious consideration (anyone want to show me evidence for this which made the rounds as if it's a legitimate product among websites and magazines a few years back?).

IMO, mindless fringe products do not require "first hand experience" any more than spending money to try out multiple psychics to find one who isn't a fraud.

A few months ago, I read the final "Keeping It Honest #99" article by Srajan Ebaen of 6Moons (recommended website only if you want to see numerous examples of subjective folly), subtitled "Farewell to the great pretenders" (who is he referring to!?).
"I promised you a distillate of ninety-eight preceding features. You might feel disappointed now but – this was that. Really. There’s nothing wrong with learning from the mistakes of others. There’s nothing wrong with asking for some advice. But the foundation against which all such insights and advice are used is always our personal experience, then decision. Why can’t we trust in our own experience? Should our ears enjoy something which the audiophile police or forum hyenas claim is wrong… how does it matter? Perhaps our wiring is inverted. So what? It’s our wiring. We must live with it. Why can’t we trust our own enjoyment? Should that change over the years, we adapt. We stop buying white wine and start drinking red. It’s not complicated."
As you can see, while the prose is hard to follow, this weak "distillate" of 98 articles came down to the simple idea that we should just "enjoy" however we see fit. Is this all that a "subjectivist" audiophile has to offer after all those articles and reviewing probably hundreds of thousands, if not millions of MSRP dollars of gear through the years? I personally find this rather sad, empty, meaningless, grossly shallow, telling the world that after 20 years, he has understood nothing new, and nothing more to offer than what we've all known as children ("It's all kindergarten stuff" as he admits). Surely as audiophiles who devote time, and passion into this hobby, we must have learned more about ourselves and the technologies!

BTW, I can't say I know of any "audiophile police" who cares to bust hobbyists for listening with "inverted wiring". At least an objective audiophile can test and say if that preference came with maintenance of "absolute polarity" through the audio system. That objective knowledge with self awareness of polarity preference could be useful, right? ;-)

In basically all areas of life, I hope we aim for something greater, friends. As a physician, I hope to have added something to the field if not at least changed the life trajectory for patients for the better during my career. As a father, I hope my children will have learned something of value both in knowledge and in character through our relationships. So too as a "more objective, rational" audiophile, I hope the articles talking about high-fidelity playback have been able to enlighten readers with important truths that apply to all of us. And even if not enlighten, at least stir thoughts about the "whys" and "hows" of this hobby. There is humility in accepting that our perceptions (whatever our "Golden Ears" tell us) are but part of a much bigger story which we can take time to learn about - the world (and this hobby) has much, much more to offer than what we achieved in kindergarten.


Looking into the crystal ball, let me throw out some observations about the hobby and expectations for the decade ahead. As usual, when I offer these musings, it'll be interesting to see how many of these ideas actually play out if we are to revisit this post in a few years' time:

1. It would not be surprising to see an extended period of consolidation in this hobby. Even if devices make evolutionary resolution gains, however small with each technological generation, it's not like the human auditory apparatus evolves within such rapid technological timeframes to experience benefit anyways.

2. The luxury audio "High End" will need to come to terms with the fact that while the "non-utilitarian" benefits of expensive devices will always have a role in consumer psychology, consumers are now well on the path of recognizing that price no longer correlates with sonic fidelity for much of the electronics products like DACs, streamers, computers and amplifiers already at very reasonable price points.

3. Very reasonably priced devices from the likes of Topping, SMSL, Sabaj, etc. have created a market for objectively-advertised devices demonstrating transparency. I suspect the Industry is taking notice and it's great to see reviews of these devices starting to enter into the mainstream audio magazines (like this and this). The connection between price and "fidelity" of speakers and headphones likewise has become tenuous and will likely continue to be challenged ahead. (For example, the many reasonably priced ELAC speakers and if you want to splurge a bit, recently I heard the <US$2000 SEAS A26 kit I think hits well above the asking price if you're looking for "audiophile" quality bookshelves!)

4. As a result of the market competition and as we enter into the very likely specter of economic contractions and uncertainties ahead, I suspect there will be a need for luxury brands with sky-high prices to rethink their business model. This would be good for consumers of new products, and possibly phenomenal prices in the used market in the next few years. Audio products are not financial investment vehicles, friends. I hope you've already started saving your pennies, in anticipation for that day once we pass this current inflationary cycle.

5. When it comes to the technologies, clearly the shift to mobile audio (as discussed back in 2016) is well along its way. This is part of the generational cycle we need to think about as the participation of Boomers decline in this hobby and those of us in the Gen-X club "mature". While there will always be some interest in anachronistic technologies, I think things like tube technology and analogue reproduction (turntables, LPs, reel-to-reel which never really made much of a "comeback") are in decline with perhaps the MoFi fiasco as yet another reminder of basic truths.

6. What will come ahead? Well, during times of consolidation, I think audiophiles will appreciate what they already have and recognize that much of what is on offer as the "next greatest thing" will very much be lateral moves rather than real advancements. In time, I think we will understand ourselves better as hobbyists if we take as much of an internal journey as an external one of consumerism. We might start to recognize our idiosyncratic "euphonic" preferences and understand how these are manifested in the gear we choose (eg. non-flat frequencies, noise level preferences, and euphonic distortion amounts). Just as there will always be a path for audiophiles who value "high fidelity", I trust in the days ahead we recognize and acknowledge where we each deviate from that "accurate sound" target. There is absolutely nothing wrong with having subjective preferences that aren't strictly "hi-fi" - just make sure we're insightful about the claims we make!

7. Even if the traditional 2-channel playback audiophile hobby with the luxury "High End", as represented in much of the mainstream magazines stagnates, technology will continue to move forward. Back in 2019, I suggested the importance of getting headphone listeners on board with virtualized multichannel. This is the obvious conjunction of the shift to mobile listening with multichannel audio. This is also the way to increase consumption of multichannel content beyond the expense and cumbersomeness of building a surround-capable room with multiple speakers. In time, perhaps those virtualized surround headphone listeners will upgrade to higher quality multichannel media rooms with top-end amps and fancy speakers.

As you know, by 2021 with the push from Apple for Spatial/Atmos Audio, that dream of "surround sound for the masses" has begun in earnest with Amazon Music, Tidal and Qobuz also participating though to lesser degrees. There is still much to be done in this area which centers on the continued development of DSP technologies for the hardware and more importantly, a believable model of the HRTF for each listener to achieve better headphone surround realism. We are still a ways from being able to easily and accurately customize the parameters for each listener and I will be looking forward to progress in this domain! (Creative's Super X-Fi with ear-shape customizations and the head-tracking of Redscape were interesting steps to improve the perception of realism.)

Recently I've been exploring music sub-genres like "vaporwave" which is a form of electronica that summons a heavy dose of sentimentality wrapped into a product that sounds often like light electro-jazz of an alternate retro universe with synth sounds of yesteryear ('80s and '90s). In this subgenre, you'll also see much Japanese/Asian iconography as it evokes the era of Japan's economic peak, imagery reminiscent of a dark Blade Runner-esque neon glow with other characteristics like lo-fi "8-bit" resolution, temporal slowing, and often plenty of dreamy, moody reverb. Some examples of this would be Macintosh Plus's Floral Shoppe (2011), 2814's 新しい日の誕生 (Birth of a New Day) (2015), or the work of death's dynamic shroud (their recent Darklife (2022) is a nice evolution with a heavier edge).

Like vaporwave music, not only do many audiophiles celebrate the retro esthetic, but also idealize analogue technologies like old tube designs and ceaseless versions of classic BBC speakers. In recent days, a number of companies have reached back to designs of the past with the resurrection of products like the Mission 770, JBL L100 Classic, the PSB Passif 50, or the classic look of the JBL SA750, and NAD C 3050 LE. It's great that these products exist and I think many audiophiles will appreciate that the internals have been updated with modern drivers (including metal tweeters), Class D modules, Class G (rail-switching A/B), and network streaming. However, as we envision hi-fi, particularly 2-channel reproduction reaching a level of objective performance hitting various physiological ceilings and maturation of computing technologies in audio, we might see within the audiophile hobby a technological stagnation, increasingly focused on appearances and sentimentality - "an endless repetition of pastiche and past cultural artifacts of a complacent culture" as this interesting commentary on vaporwave and "hauntology" puts it.

Injection of computer technology into the audio hobby has been a vital force in the last decade (actually, since before 2000 with the rise of MP3 and file sharing, but really took off in the last 15 years or so). How much more vitality is left to inject remains to be seen. Looking ahead, I'd certainly be curious to see if stylistic recapitulation becomes a prominent feature rather than technological advancement in the audio Industry.

I wonder, in another 50 years (2070), would the "audiophile" hobby still be a small group of middle-aged and older Gen Z (born ~1997-2010) & Gen Alpha guys (born ~2010-2024) transfixed over similar looking 2-channel boxes, arguing about whether special cables make a difference, and luxury manufacturers still using words like "jitter" to encourage purchases of the next great new product that plays 16/44.1?

Alternatively, we could imagine a future where in 50 years, the greater audiophile/music-lover pursuit is for those well along the path of implementing cutting-edge wireless transmission and neural-machine links, many experiencing music directly piped into the nervous system over 10G wireless. Interconnect quality, noise floor, distortions, temporal anomalies, the idea of "room correction" would be either moot or basically meaningless as the only limiting factor would be the capabilities of an individual's neurological system. Hmmm, on second thought, this could be a rather dystopic future; let's just stick with safe 2-channel boxes. ;-)

As you will see, I still have a number of interesting products to test out, classes of devices to review, and thoughts to discuss, but I'm thinking at this point, it's more than OK to slow down the weekly publication schedule a bit.

We in the West have clearly entered the "post-pandemic" phase and are realigning our routines and expectations to live with the coronavirus and its strains. By now, almost everyone I know including myself has already recovered from a least one infection with COVID-19. Looking ahead, there are albums to enjoy, movies to watch, family things to do, friends to meet, photos to take, golf balls to hit, fish to catch, etc... And as myself and the Gen-X'ers proceed through middle age, I trust we're all also taking stock of the roles we play, responsibilities and commitments to complete, that we can one day look back on as "generative", meaningful, consistent with our values for this stage in the lifecycle. The tests and contents of this blog being one of those things I can hopefully look back on with pride as having done my part for the hobby and for fellow pilgrims on this path. ;-)

That's all for now. I truly hope you're all having a wonderful time with your music and hardware systems. I'm not "done" quite yet as an audiophile or blogger, just wanted to take some time to look back - and forward - here at the 500-articles mark!

Until next time... Hope you're enjoying the music, friends.

35 comments:

  1. Congratulations on what is a great achievement for someone with, I'm guessing, a demanding job, not to mention parental/domestic cares (and joys)! And thank you for tirelessly championing sanity, respect for evidence and unmagical thinking and listening - and for writing so compellingly and entertainingly about it all (even for those of us with graph-blindness :p). I totally share your views on audio - I came to similar conclusions about the state of hi-fi journalism (though without your quantitative rigour) as far back as the late 1980s, when damning everything digital began to seem the norm. I stayed away for ages as a result, but interest in DACs led me here, where over the last couple of years you've offered a most welcoming and enlightening way back in. Apologies for not having written earlier to thank you - luckily, your impressive milestone is the perfect prompt. Glad you're not quite 'done' but, yes, you mustn't keep feeding us every week, addicted as we are to your posts! Anyway, like you, I need to make more time for proper listening and socialising, and 'waste' less of it online and on my particular obsession (recorded music). Thanks again and all the very best, Nick

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    1. Greetings Nick,
      Thanks for the encouragement man ;-).

      I think you hit on an important general idea about tendencies, almost fads maybe, in the world of audio when you noticed that "damning everything digital began to seem the norm".

      As humans, we do have a primal tendency to tribalism don't we? This plays out in everything from politics to religions to hobbies like audiophilia. Presumably in the '80s with the rise of digital, perhaps some companies needed to promote that the old-skool, lower-tech analogue industry still needed to be fed and watered so emphasis was needed.

      I suppose in all we do and what we say, it's easy to have "agendas"; basically just what we stand for in life. While I too have an agenda ("sanity, respect for evidence and unmagical thinking and listening"), it's fun to hopefully record these ideas down freely in public, and as long as Google Blogger allows, hopefully the discussions here will be useful for audiophiles yet to come.

      Whether other audiophiles agree with me or we disagree on things, I hope the articles have been "fair" and "balanced" (another two words often used in public yet one wonders if true!) as a path I have followed and perhaps resonates with others.

      Yeah, gotta make sure not to waste time. ;-) Life and work are busy and the kids are heading off to post-secondary soon so there are things I need to do (like the recent family vacation to Peru) before this stage of life has passed!

      Best regards Nick! And hey, maybe in time you'll also enjoy the graph-reading as well, friend. ;-)

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    2. Dear Arch, you really are amazing - replying positively, attentively and at length to every comment from us here (as you always do), effectively writing a second post! :D Thank you!

      I forgot to mention first time round that the split in audiophilia you analyse and comment on so perceptively goes right back to the early days of the disc. In the editorial and correspondence columns of Britain's early consumer magazine The Gramophone (launched 1923), heated debates arose between 'realists' - you and us ;-) - and 'romantics'. The realists won, with Percy Wilson heading The Gramophone's technical contributors and putting it at the forefront of measurement-based design and reviewing for many decades. I started reading Gramophone as a teenager in the mid-70s, blissfully unaware of these earlier battles. Later, venturing outside its pages into other British hi-fi mags told me something was up: the explosion of suggestive but wildly unspecific subjective epithets, the 'obviously, digital is bad' stance when my ears told me otherwise, the pushing of ever more expensive kit and accessories... And this time, they won :|

      Everyone, but *everyone* I know assumes LPs sound better than digits and, because I collect recordings, assumes I think the same! So you can imagine what a breath of fresh, well-supported air you have been :D

      All the best, as ever,

      Nick

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    3. As usual, a pleasure interacting with individuals like you Nick!

      On the whole, I think the comments here over the years have been some of the most perceptive compared to say the superficial one-liners one typically sees for example on YouTube video comments (yeesh).

      Fascinating history about The Gramophone and Percy Wilson. Check this out:
      https://www.gramophonemuseum.com/percy-wilson.html

      Fascinating that along with his work in the field of audio, he appears to be quite the "spiritualist"... Hmmm...

      I would imagine (hope) especially with classical music collectors, digital is generally acknowledged as superior sound quality. Yeah, maybe the "romantics" are winning (or at least more vocal) to some extent for the last generation. However, to borrow from someone named Edgar J. Mohn: ;-)
      "A lie has speed, but truth has endurance."

      Over the time frame of decades perhaps, the "realists" aren't going anywhere. Even if history is a series of pendulum swings with seasons of "romanticism", I suspect that the pendulum is swinging the other direction - at least towards a more healthy balance.

      Enjoy the music!

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  2. "I hope this blog has provided some useful suggestions and hit on fundamental facts as a reflection of the path of "Archimago the Audiophile" at this point in history" - For me, this blog has absolutely achieved that goal and much more. Congratulations on this milestone. My musical enjoyment has increased substantially from your contributions and other rational music enthusiasts.

    Over the long term, I'm certain that there will be a demand for quality listening experiences but less sure on the technology to deliver those experiences. I think the near-term future of this hobby will continue the trend of consolidation in affordability and devices to enjoy music. Powered speakers replacing equipment racks, continued migration to streaming, DSP at multiple points to optimize experience, and continued improvements in portable listening (headphones).

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    1. Hey Doug,
      Indeed man. Some exciting technologies ahead which I hope audiophile hobbyists embrace and explore!

      While there's nothing wrong with looking at old technologies, I think it's important for "audiophiles" to reclaim the image of the hobby as something fresh, new, with vitality. We cannot end up becoming seen as a bunch of "old rich(er) men" lusting over shiny 4+ figure MSRP products and gazing incessantly at old tube and vinyl gear - technologies and devices that have long been supplanted in fidelity and practicality. Nothing wrong with any individual audiophile taking an interest in these things, but in aggregate, the high-fidelity enthusiast I hope desires a loftier goal.

      [I guess as a doctor, I cannot help but make sure we add some philosophy, sociology and psychology into these articles! The "clinical" human condition is not one of pure biology, but also must embrace aspects of these other domains of what it means to be a well-rounded human being.]

      As usual, thanks for all the comments over the years Doug!

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  3. Hi Archi.
    Congratulations from my side. 10 years are very impressive and also a lot of work. It is very refreshing, to read your site, as a „balance“ to the non technical orientated reports / reviews / articles. Thank you.
    Juergen

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    1. Thanks Juergen,
      It's been awesome chatting and working on things here and there over the years. ;-)

      Hey one of these days, I'm going to have to pay you a visit overseas when I wander over to your part of the world!

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  4. Nice piece Archimago and congratulations on your milestone. As @Nick perfectly stated “And thank you for tirelessly championing sanity, respect for evidence and unmagical thinking and listening - and for writing so compellingly and entertainingly about it all (even for those of us with graph-blindness :p).” As a boomer who nearly drowned in a sea of subjective nonsense I appreciate the life preserver your blog has come to represent for me. (Your musings on “perceptively perfect” gear is a fine example.) I’m glad you’ll continue blogging .. your articles are a breath of fresh air. Best.

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    1. Thanks Melvin,
      A pleasure! I hope you're having a great time with the gear. And free from indeed the vast oceans of subjective nonsense out there. Of course there are times when some subjective perceptions can be trustworthy, but I think that takes time to get to know the persons expressing their perceptions and we can pick out the folks who might have the same tastes as us for music and hardware qualities.

      All the best!

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  5. Joining the stream of congratulations from other commenters! I remember somebody in a comment to one of previous Archinmago's posts has called him "the most hardworking person in the audio blogging industry." :) I totally agree with that statement—I'm subscribed to a dozen or more blogs of likely minded sane technical audio folks, and I'm lucky if I see a new post in a month, while Archimago alone steadily produces a huge piece of excellent technical material almost every week! Keep up great job!

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    1. Thanks Mikhail,
      Also great to hear your ideas and comments over the years!

      To be honest, when I started this, I wasn't sure what I was going to do... My thinking back in 2013 was that we can measure a few things, address what's new, talk about maybe some albums, etc. I figured, give it 6 months and I'll be bored and move on. ;-)

      Well, as it happened, I guess the more I looked, the more there seemed to be to talk through! Part of the fun was to follow the paths that opened up and the questions and comments readers provided seeing if there was anything I can do as a hobbyist to address beliefs or claims. Other times, questionable people like Neil Young and his PonoPlayer claims, or the madness of MQA provided great fodder for audiophile discussions; especially the early days (2015-2016) when the mainstream audiophile media looked so blatantly ridiculous in their unfounded enthusiasm!

      I guess I'm a bit obsessive with wanting to make sure to be reasonably complete with these articles. Hence the long length of the articles at times. I must say that I debated with myself about the length of some of these articles. I decided ultimately that it would be better to just "put out there what I got" instead of chopping things into smaller pieces.

      I hate reading articles that are just a handful of paragraphs and walking away feeling there was no substance. IMO there are lots of sites out there meant as just click-bait.

      One day, I am happy to truly have nothing to add. That'll definitely be time to hang up the blogging keyboard and not waste your time or mine and let's just enjoy some music. ;-)

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  6. Any chance of measuring those A26s? As an old A25 owner, I'd be really interested to know how these updated versions perform in the objective realm.

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    1. Hi Phil,
      The owner just built them so he's still out on the honeymoon phase which I don't blame him for since he did an excellent job!

      I'll see if I can pry it from him at some point.

      In the meantime, you can have a look here for some measurement results and mods (eg. improved crossover):
      https://www.vandomburg.net/audio/do-it-yourself-speaker-project-seas-a26/
      https://www.vandomburg.net/audio/seas-a26-improving-the-stock-kit/

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  7. Damn.. i'm still waiting for the 10 best products over the last decade...thanks anyway(⁠•⁠‿⁠•⁠)

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    1. Hey Rotiv,
      As you can imagine, I ain't that kind of reviewer ;-).

      No "best of" here. Not even a star rating! I hope the results and subjective descriptions are all that an audiophile need to figure out my thoughts. And if they can't figure it out, well, then there's more studying to do. ;-)

      More fun to "teach an audiophile to fish" instead of telling him how the fish tastes. Once awhile I'm happy to check out the What HiFi? ratings though for the "best of" lists or Stereophile's recommended components.

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  8. First off, congratulations on your 10 years!
    In the past ten years I have also been trying to become better informed about the hobby. That is how I found your "musings".
    Your writings are a great source for objective information which has been lacking (or hidden) for way too long!
    Thank you!

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    1. Hey thanks nicoff,
      Congrats on moving on towards the objective information side of the hobby! I certainly hope that over time, most audiophiles will continue to make that shift recognizing that knowledge brings with it an opportunity to ask more questions, perhaps tougher questions and the power to separate the real from the fanciful!

      Enjoy the music...

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  9. Hey Arch, congratulations! Wow, +500 articles over 10 years. Quite the accomplishment! I have written a few articles and have an idea of the amount of effort required to write, express clearly, double check the data, etc. It's a lot of work! Kudos to you man!

    Thanks for linking "the rise and fall of formats." While some formats come and go, I love the annotation "vinyl never dies" :-) I wonder if it will still be around in 50 years...

    Keep up the great writings Arch!

    Kind regards,
    Mitch

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    1. Thanks Mitch,
      Been fun these last 10 years and I appreciate you also working tirelessly on the DSP and room correction side adding to the knowledge as well as application of that with convolution DSP playback. Well, writing articles is still much easier than debugging software. ;-)

      Yeah, I think for the foreseeable future, vinyl will be with us even if popularity rises and falls over the decades. There's an "iconic" image in our minds attached to vinyl/LPs isn't there? No matter what, the look of a turntable, the tonearm, a stylus, and a spinning LP will always refer to audio or "music"...

      I think because the vinyl playback image as a cultural icon never stood for anything else since there's no way to encode video into that format makes it enduring. Oh yeah, since vinyl is also non-biodegradable plastic/PVC, that stuff will definitely stay with us a long time - hundreds of years, for better or worse! ;-)

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  10. Happy birthday from Italy, Archimago! It seems to me that there is a class of products that you have not reviewed: portable digital audio recorders with built-in mics, such as Sony PCM-D100, Zoom H4n, Tascam DR-05, etc. Could you also think about them in the future? Many thanks and ... keep it up!

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    1. Thanks for the note MTB,
      Yeah, you're right. I've been in general neglectful of portable audio recorders like that. Most of the time I've been focused on the "high fidelity" playback systems and ADCs I use for measurements.

      Curious, what do you use these devices for? Is it for capturing concerts or are you also using them for your own music/audio production? I'm curious since if one does measurements on devices like these, what would be the most interesting part for you as an audiophile user?

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  11. Excellent post as usual.

    My summation: Knowledge Is Power. :-)

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    1. Yup Vaal,
      Knowledge is indeed power. Audiophiles should never forget this! And never let anyone take that power from us by promoting fanciful advertising and expecting the hobby to just believe such lies, or worse, instituting/infusing demi-religious beliefs into the hobby.

      Sometimes it's not even worth the energy to engage against the infinite possible madness when we see/hear such discussions. No matter what, we always have feet to just walk away...

      I'm reminded of this quote variously attributed to Einstein:
      "Two things are infinite: the universe and human stupidity; and I’m not sure about the universe!"

      [Of course, it's not always "stupidity" that claims are made in audiophilia! Sometimes it's just plain antisocial / psychopathic / greed, other times, it's possibly delusional what some people believe.]

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  12. Excellent post. I think as time goes on and the ultra high end multi killobuck electronics are unmasked as no better if not worse in performance than the value priced entries from Hypex, Purifi, SMSL, Topping and the like, consumers will come to recognize that high end audio is not a Veblen good anymore, if, indeed, it ever was. This evolution can't be anything but positive for people who really care about sound quality.

    Multichannel music rendered realistically over headphone will, U hope, become an emergent market. I own a Smyth Realizer A16, and I've made 24 channel HRIR (PRIRs per Smyth) if both Dutch & Dutch 8C's and my own LS 50 Metas
    with sub. Those renderings played through HD800s are very realistic. The Smyth device with it's ability to capture edge of the art speakers, decode Atmos, Dts-X, Auro 3D, and all other legacy formats, and utilize headtracking, is the state of the art for such devices. I hope that one day that technology can be used as software on a PC, which would be the breakthrough needed to allow this technology to really take off.

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    1. Oh, that Smyth thing is very tempting! All the owners seem very enthusiastic about it. It's obviously pretty expensive (even in this hobby) but it surely is something new and special...

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    2. Nice, thanks for the reminder about Veblen and his contributions, Phoenix!

      We are certainly far into the "conspicuous consumption" side of the equation these days where many of these capitalist ventures appear to be nothing more than chasing luxury dollars on goods that are well beyond their actual value.

      Thanks for talking about the Smyth Realizer A16. Yeah, I see that device as an example of something 2 steps ahead of where the mass consumers are these days. Great that audiophiles like yourself are exploring this area already with capturing HRIR/PRIR for playback. That is certainly part of the future which I hope over time we can see innovations in that bring consumers closer to that level of performance.

      I've been promising Mitch that I would play with my binaural microphones to start doing some of that myself for the last couple years. ;-) I'm sure I'll get there sooner or later...

      For now though, I'm not surprised by the Z Reviews' reaction in his videos:
      https://youtu.be/g5c0694uUPE
      https://youtu.be/xI-50CbwNKw

      Great to hear from a Smyth Realizer user obviously with the knowhow to get performance from truly "future-fi"!

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  13. Thank you Archimago! I fully agree with the previous comments. This place is so much more than just a blog - it's a treasure trove of measurements, analysis, facts, and balanced opinions! I only wish I had found it (and ASR) earlier - that would have saved me quite a bit of $$$ on expensive stuff that doesn't perform to match the price.

    For the future, I certainly hope that you will continue this journey, even though the pace might be slower/more sustainable.

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    1. Thanks Freddie,
      Likewise appreciate your comments over the years! Thanks for the comment on saving money. That's something I need to remind folks as well I think.

      Thankfully it's only natural when we understand how the devices work and focus on sonic fidelity that we have the power to judge if what we're participating in is the "conspicuous consumption" noted above with Phoenix and Thorstein Veblen's ideas.

      In a hobby where there is too much luxury/conspicuous consumption (and I think the term "High End" is used to denote this), those of us who decide to avoid those products might be labelled by certain audiophiles as being "cheap".

      Furthermore, some will claim that being "cheap" has to do with being envious of those who can or want to spend huge money on such products. Years ago, I wrote a commentary on this:
      http://archimago.blogspot.com/2015/03/musings-audiophiles-us-vs-them.html
      back in the day when Lavorgna was still running AudioStream.

      To me, it's totally fine to spend money any way one wishes. But as an audiophile, professing "high fidelity" sound, to be spending unnecessary dollars just doesn't make sense, not because one is envious of another, but rather it's a matter of principle.

      If one is not interested in the hobby to "keep up with the Joneses" and impress audiophile friends, then what does it matter if one runs $50,000 speakers with $200 DACs if we know the DACs are achieving levels of high "transparency"? That's not being "cheap" with a DAC, rather we can applaud the audiophile for recognizing the wisdom of optimizing value, and companies that produce such quality devices!

      I've seen magazines, YouTubers and bloggers express the idea that there's some kind of silly formula (there used to be some formula about 10-20% of system cost should be spent on cables, right???) to be dedicated on various devices. Rather, IMO, guys and gals who can achieve amazing fidelity at lower cost are to be celebrated! Money can be used in other things like buying more music, taking family out for a nice dinner, and maybe travel the world...

      For those not aware, we touched upon relative cost of components years ago here as well:
      http://archimago.blogspot.com/2019/07/summer-musings-how-much-difference-does.html

      All the best and hope you're enjoying the music Freddie!

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  14. Congrats on the decade! Your blog started as a source of confirmation for me with regards to a few issues I was researching with my audio setups when my own effort to provide similar data was too complicated or time consuming.

    Bookmarked, strolled in once in a while, and discovered that most of your topics were entertaining to read and extremely informative. It was your critical exposure about MQA with Mans R. that totally pulled me in.

    Now, your blog site has me regularly visiting to see if there is anything new to read about the audio world.

    I enjoy your style in providing highly technical information while interpreting the results in a manner that someone like myself, with only a modest educational background in this field, is clearly able to follow.

    Thanks!

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    1. Thanks Jim,
      Great to hear that you are/were also looking at the research as well and figuring out some of these technical details as a hobbyist.

      From the start, I wanted this blog to be reflective of an independent audiophile trying to figure things out for himself and not approaching this as an engineer. I get the sense that there's been tension over the years with audiophiles getting defensive when an "engineer" starts talking about technical stuff and declaring products as "snake oil"; feeling disrespected or diminished in some way. I trust these feelings are not necessary.

      My hope is that bit by bit, audiophiles themselves can see what's done over time and recognize that the deeper we go with objective analysis, the more we actually know and can correlate with our own listening experiences. While we may still have our own "cultural" differences, the ultimate knowledge around how products work and what makes a difference is the same across different audio groups whether it be hardware engineers, pro studio audio guys, or home listeners.

      We may make different esthetic decisions. The products may have different features to fit each niche. But ultimately, whether something makes a difference or achieves a level of fidelity would be uniform and can be tested in much the same way across each "discipline" whether in a lab, at the studio, or in the home.

      Hopefully that variation in the "voice" as an audiophile writing about technical topics which usually would come out of the engineering camp came through as I explored things like cables, jitter, noise levels, etc. over the years!

      As an audiophile (even if self-declared as being "more objective"), the criticisms of the Industry and some of the media players I trust hasn't been too harsh ;-). Rather, some things just need to be said if we are to be honest with what's going on.

      All the best and hope you're enjoying the music Jim!

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  15. Congrats Arch on reaching 500 posts and still going strong after a decade! Your discoveries through objective testing of audiophile gear (including insightful write ups on several pieces I previously owned) have profoundly changed my perception of what genuinely contributes to great sound. Looking forward to the next 500 blog posts! :-)

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    1. Thanks Phil,
      Lovely going through this journey with folks like yourself! Great getting the chance to check out some of the gear you have over the years. Certainly nice to have local audiophiles around to bounce ideas off of ;-).

      All the best and I'm sure we'll touch base again very soon!

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  16. Hi Archimago,

    "I truly hope you're all having a wonderful time with your music and hardware systems."

    No, I am not having a wonderful time here in Russia under putin's regime. Trying hard not to get conscripted by force and not to become a killer or be killed in this bloody unjust horrible war that the tyrant putin started.

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    1. Oh crap fgk,
      Seriously, I hope in the near future before further conscriptions the people over there can deal with this madness.

      Take care man, will be thinking of you...

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