Saturday, 25 October 2025

As if higher prices always correlate to fidelity: Stereophile's Defense of Luxury Audio & the false Binding Statement of High-End Audio.

Hublot Big Bang Unico, ~US$20k+ depending on model.

Hey everyone, I just got back from the wonderful trip to Central Europe and figured I'd extend some thoughts expressed in the previous article: The Luxury of Sound and Time: Audiophile products, the Rolex and Timex Analogy.

That article went online October 12th and I was surprised to see Stereophile posted their article “In Defense of Sticker Shock” on October 17th written by Rogier van Bakel featuring a fancy looking, but inexpensive quartz wristwatch as the title image; what synchronicity! I assume his article must have been published in print/e-magazine earlier than when it showed up online.

I see the article pretty much opens with this statement:

Say “$10,000 DAC” and watch audio-forum commenters descend like pigeons on a dropped hot dog, flapping and furious.

Yeah, that's probably a fair observation! However, I think the first question we must ask ourselves is: “What’s wrong with that?

You see, we have to consider context. Unless one is on a high-end manufacturer-specific forum where everyone owns one of these $10k DACs and presumably feels that the device is of good value, these days on most free and open audiophile forums, the hobbyist ethos I believe remains aligned with the desire for function first (sonic fidelity, transparency, "functionalist" philosophy) and form second (appearances, brand names, and other non-utilitarian "aesthete" factors). We can see this tendency among audiophiles in this thread on Steve Hoffman Forums asking about preference for “sound or esthetics”.

As I discussed last time, in the world of luxury goods, like that fancy Hublot wristwatch above, it’s the opposite priority. Clearly dollars are spent not on the best accuracy (the Hublot Unico mechanical watches are typically accurate within +/-3-4 seconds/day), but on fancy materials, craftsmanship, brand image, design, and other subjective hedonic factors promoting pride of ownership.

Given my comments previously, I do believe that luxury goods have their place, and manufacturers pursuing that market can certainly find financial success. That is not an issue. However, I wish audiophile magazines like Stereophile can simply be open about their bias as advertising agents for that luxury market. As demonstrated in his article, Mr. van Bakel attempts to uphold a kind of “moral order” that keeps exotic (Ultra) High-End products on top which I believe most audiophiles can already transparently see as questionable.

In his defense of the expensive “sticker shock” products, he continues to perpetuate a core “binding statement” that the hi-end segment wants readers to believe:

More money buys you better sound quality.

Through the years of listening, technical and objective analysis, those of us exploring this hobby have I believe overwhelmingly demonstrated that there is no meaningful correlation between better sonic fidelity and the upper price echelon (for example this); in fact, it could in some cases be the opposite (as per issues with the Linn streamers). Whether a DAC costs five-figures or three-figures really doesn't matter fidelity-wise for us in the 21st Century with this kind of mature technology. This logical truth can be further verified with blind listening tests (which the high-end subjective-leaning folks often refuse to acknowledge as useful) and also with measurements (which the high-end would rather us believe doesn't relate to sound quality). There is indeed a rather clear price-performance “diminishing return” on fidelity, possibly no returns, or even negative fidelity returns (with expensive tube amps for example) across all components.

A collapse of that binding statement of faith correlating price with sound quality should automatically put doubt into the value of much of the (ultra) high-end products among functionalist audiophiles. This would also render whole classes of "components" like very expensive cables and tweaks (cable risers, tiny "acoustic treatments", fuses, various "noise" filters, unnecessarily clocks, expensive power supplies) with no objective benefits into snake oil or quackery territory if promoted as significantly improving sound.

I trust that none of what I'm saying here is a surprise. At some level, it's just common sense for many of us with experience over the years. I see that Mr. van Bakel tries his hand at doctrinal apologetics on behalf of the high-end companies, rationalizing that stratospheric high prices are due to: inflation, the complexity of running a business, HR, supply-chain issues, tariffs, dealer and distributor overheads, and of course low volumes. So what? Every manufacturer needs to make sure their products have value and adequate consumer demand. If a company truly can “innovate” and successfully market their items, they'll stand a fighting chance, otherwise, such is the free-market system regardless of what price tag they demand because they stayed up all night haunted by whether their cymbal fade subjectively sounded right!

How silly to compare spending $50-60k on a car which is not a luxury item but often a necessity for work and family life versus an entertainment stereo system at comparable prices! Also consider the amount of materials, technologies and components in a vehicle compared to DACs, speakers, and amps. How even more cringeworthy to glorify the idea that a stereo “can take you everywhere else” and the car only takes us from point A to B! Does he not think a hi-res capable $500 DAC can stir our memories and elevate emotions when playing music from that concert hall in Tokyo just as well as some unspecified $10k DAC? For me, a song played on an AM car radio can transport me to times and places in life also - such is the power of art, not merely the things we own!*

* Cue the Alan Parsons' quote that "Audiophiles don't use their equipment to listen to your music. Audiophiles use your music to listen to their equipment." IMO there is a level of maturity we've achieved when we're able to clearly see/hear, and love the art, rather than merely fetishizing the hardware.

Let’s get real, man. If one seriously wants to be immersed in that Tokyo venue, get into multichan… Oh wait… Stereophile almost exclusively is stuck with 2-channel stuff, never mind. IMO they're missing out on a superior experience. 🙁

I would highly recommend that Rogier van Bakel, Stereophile magazine, and the High-End Industry embrace that “Veblen Goods” concept. Just be honest with us and don't fight the obvious truth in such a silly, pretentious, way. Clearly, many of these products are not meant for audiophile hobbyists looking for high-fidelity sound.

There's of course nothing wrong with audiophiles having fun reading about very expensive products, checking out beautiful pictures, or enjoying listening to these high-end pieces at audio shows and dealerships. However, from an industry money-making point of view, this luxury segment is unlikely to achieve growth just because a few geeks like to read about this stuff in magazines, blogs, watch videos, or show up to superficially listen to the components in an unfamiliar sound room with no intent of purchasing. Rather, it's obvious that these companies are aspiring to achieve credibility in the playgrounds of those seeking luxury – among premium brands like Louis Vuitton, Hermès, Tiffany & Co., Ferrari, Rolls-Royce, Rolex, Hugo Boss, Dolce & Gabbana, and whatever companies make big yachts. 😉

I think manufacturers of these kinds of products should have a frank discussion with Stereophile, The Absolute Sound, Hi-Fi+, Hi-Fi News & Record Review, and others they sponsor with advertising about how their goods are being portrayed, promoted, what image they desire to project, and represented by whom. As discussed to some extent in the previous post's comments, maybe it's time to start considering a new advertising game plan that actually caters to the kind of consumers they're wooing because this kind of Stereophile article, the negative reactions and sentiments on typical forums by audiophiles exasperated by ballooning MSRP are not doing them any good. I suspect this is still the main reason why Stereophile scrubbed their website of all public comments earlier this year. Opacity rather than open dialogue and furthering understanding will not grow the hobby.

Older generation, homely-looking gentlemen with oversized, expensive hardware in small basements and cluttered rooms might not be the best image to present to the buyers that the High-End companies are aiming for. Clearly, many of these products are meant for individuals in very high socioeconomic tiers, who also have mansions, who look like they have the money to actually own these things at MSRP; "cool" people who also own other products from the brands listed above.

If this High-End “Sticker Shock” Industry is what a magazine like Stereophile wants to primarily serve, protect, to help create positive sentiment and demand for $10,000+ DACs, $20,000+ amplifiers, $50,000+ speakers, $1,000+ interconnects, there’s certainly nothing wrong with that decision. But is it working out for them? And are they serving a diverse enough range of audiophiles including the younger generations who might not want to spend more than $500 on a DAC but are the future of this hobby?

If they do desire to grow the audio hobby, I wonder if explicitly identifying product "tiers" could be helpful. For example, the A Blog To Watch site sets a threshold between wristwatches <$500 and those priced above in their reviews. In the same way, maybe audio magazines can categorize products as "High-Fidelity" or "High-End" based on the intended market segment. Thorough measurements of High-Fidelity products would be warranted, and I think exempting the High-End items from similar objective analysis, perhaps as per manufacturer request, would also be fine.

While it would be interesting to know the measurement results for something like a $175k Wadax Atlantis Reference DAC or a $1M DarTZeel phono cartridge, it actually doesn't matter because no rational hi-fi audiophile would buy such things based primarily on accuracy and there's no need to believe that they measure particularly well; just as mechanical Rolex accuracy should not be assumed to rival the quartz Timex (always good to see COSC accuracy certification however). Furthermore, I'm sure some companies would prefer the absence of numbers and graphs to perpetuate the mystique surrounding their equipment's performance. I believe it's fine for objectivists to be gracious towards fellow audiophile pilgrims who prefer only subjective reviews as recognition that they desire euphonic rather than accurate sound from such luxury products. Their money, their toys, and I suppose it's okay that some might need a subjective reviewer to provide external validation for their purchase.

Explicitly categorizing the products also will allow the magazine to promote different reviewers for each tier with different styles of creative writing, different priorities, perhaps emphasizing nice pictures of certain products, catered to that "class". By doing this, a magazine like Stereophile might even want to use a tag line like "Your one source for High-Fidelity and High-End audio." catering to both subjective and/or objective evaluations depending on the product, comfortably reviewing down-to-earth high volume hi-fi brands for the masses like Schiit, Topping, SMSL, and ELAC right next to the exotic luxury of Wilson, Magico, Burmester, D'Agostino, and mbl. This will allow readers the freedom to choose their form of engagement with the hobby. Some fly economy and others pay for premium class seats, both can get us to the same fun vacation destination.

So then, let’s stop playing games about whether a $10,000 DAC’s “sound quality” likely has anything special to offer hi-fi audiophiles. Dispense with that incorrect "More Expensive = Better Sound" principle beyond reasonable prices that rapidly hit diminished returns. No need to desperately defend audio products that are primarily sold as status symbols. No need to feel indignant when audiophiles recognize such products as luxury items. If craftsman-made, rare, luxury is what an audiophile wants, go for it, be proud of it, no need to claim idealistic utilitarian performance without evidence as an excuse for high prices!

Finally, Mr. van Bakel, hobbyists seeking value and accuracy should not be seen as merely deserving of the pejorative "cheap seats". I suspect that for many of us, real wealth is built with the wisdom of knowing when we don't need certain luxury material things.

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With that, let’s end off with some photos from Europe! (All images taken with the Sony Alpha α6700.)

Strahov Monastery Library, Prague. Beautiful place with a nice brewery and restaurant on premises - delicious roasted pork knuckle. Those monks sure knew how to make beer! 🤤
I thought the library rooms (Theological and Philosophical Halls) here are together even more impressive than the Old Town Clementinum Baroque Library.

Széchenyi Chain Bridge, the Danube River, and St. Stephen's. Budapest.

Ferris Wheel of Budapest. I had a great time in this area during OktoberFest Budapest with the food and varied traditional music!

Central Market, Budapest. Some dissuade tourists from eating here at the small stalls. Actually, I wanted a quick snack and the fish soup I had here was excellent and fairly priced. When traveling, I usually prefer the small stalls and street food over luxury restaurants.

Sunset at St. Stephen's Basilica, Budapest.

Scene from a Ruin Pub, old Jewish Quarter, Budapest.
Some very cool place to hang out after dark!

Schönbrunn Palace in the Autumn, Vienna. For those who like period dramas
about this part of the world, check out The Empress on Netflix.

Wall of Polaroids. Vienna.

Pipe organ in Votive Church, Vienna.

Mozart Monument. Burggarten, Vienna.
Lots of Mozart branded stuff in town for tourists (and at tourist traps
😱).

Koala at the Schönbrunn Zoo, Vienna. The world's oldest zoo still in operation. They also recently reopened their giant panda exhibit this past spring.

I saw that there are a couple of high-end audiophile stores in Vienna nearby but didn't have a chance to visit. However, Vinyl record store was near the hotel and appears to have a good stock of LPs. New albums go for €30+ each. They had a good collection of CDs and some cassettes as well.

With the time away overseas done, getting back to the daily responsibilities now. 😊

For progressive rock fans, the new Atmos mix of Genesis' The Lamb Lies Down On Broadway (1974, DR12 average for TrueHD-Atmos mix) is available on BluRay and streaming as a 50th anniversary edition release. The 7.1 TrueHD-Atmos lossless version sounds great, as does the lossy streamed 5.1 EAC3-JOC Atmos. The new mix is bold and unafraid to use the height channels; the title track sounds great, also check out "The Waiting Room" for its surround effects. They've extracted more subtleties and detail than the more dynamically compressed 2007 SACD 5.1 multichannel version (DR9-10) I also have. A nicely refreshed multichannel mix done by Bob Mackenzie with Peter Gabriel and Tony Banks!

This is another good example of why the mix/master is much more important than the resolution of the digital delivery format. I would prefer to listen to the new lossy EAC3-JOC Atmos version than the old 2007 hi-res 5.1 DSD64 SACD. As an old multi-track analog recording, it doesn't need to be delivered in pristine 24-bit lossless; that's overkill (discussed years ago, and no need to freak out about lossy Atmos).

Halloween arriving soon, here's Lady Gaga's "The Dead Dance" from MAYHEM (2025) with this bonus track on the streamed version. The album has a pretty dynamic multichannel/Atmos mix as well. Notice Tim Burton added his creepy quirkiness into the video:

Hope you're enjoying the music, dear audiophiles! As usual, stay rational.

13 comments:


  1. Hej Arch,
    Thank you for the article and your coverage of this topic. It seems to me that more of the boutique manufacturers are trying very hard to convince the interested that price really does equate with quality of sound. DartZeel home page reminds the reader that their philosophy has always been to listen first and measure later. “When it comes to music, only humans should be the judge. Theories of physics will never explain how the beauty of music can have such a profound effect on us. Listen first, measure afterwards» is the principle by which all our products are designed.” https://www.dartzeel.com/ Hmmmmm
    The blogs and forums dedicated to carful objective analysis and measurements of hi-fi products must be an annoyance to many of these boutique brands. Scrolling through the measurement and ranking charts on the ASR web page one can find some very expensive products rating quite poorly and certainly not recommended.
    If you want to satisfy the luxury consumer then make a good sounding product at an affordable price and then for those wanting something extra to be able to demonstrate their wealth just add on some gold and diamonds. This seems to be what Loewe have done with their headphones. The standard model is still quite expensive at over 1000 Euros, but the gold and bejeweled variant will set you back a cool 100 000 Euros! https://hypebeast.com/2025/8/loewe-jacob-and-co-headphones-collaboration-release-info Same, same but different!
    Humorous review of the headphone here: https://youtu.be/KflMqooMzF8?t=1376
    Great photos!
    Cheers
    Mike


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    1. Greeting Mike,
      Thanks for that video on the expensive bejeweled headphones! Gotta admit that all those diamonds and multicolored sapphires look great. They need to have socialites like Kim Kardashian or someone like that act as spokesperson.

      Hilarious, and the guy does a fantastic job with a number of the other videos I see reviewing limited editions and such in the luxury market. Would be cool if he did loudspeaker reviews of Wilsons, Magicos, etc. 🤣 But with these physically big items, he better have a nice mansion to show them off in the review!

      As for DarTZeel, and their slogan, yeah, only humans can judge music (art), but if they're aiming for high-fidelity, then that's quantifiable science. Hmmm, are these guys still in business?

      In the last 2 decades, with the expansion of social media and democratization of media technology to get the message out, it's great to see the expansion of objective testing and knowledge. Of course, the awareness of the science had been out there for ages (I'm reminded of writers like Peter Aczel and his final "What I have learned after six decades" - born in Budapest I see). With this level of transparency, it's hard to hide behind claims of mystical sound quality I think. All of this a good thing I believe which over time, we might be able to understand ourselves better as passionate hobbyists through the complex interplay of science, art, perception, and psychology!

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  2. Very interesting article, Arch.

    The whole industry seems to be going into a "low cost vs gourmet" kind of market, where the products in the middle seem to be vanishing. What seemed rare and even a little crazy a few years ago (i.e. DACs above 100k) it's now becoming "normal" and it's fairly obvious the hi-fi industry is targeting the ultra-wealthy - as an example Mcintosh/Sonus Faber was owned by a private equity firm before being sold to Bose recently.

    I kind of wonder if they aren't a little late to the party as you can read in this recent Forbes article:

    "The luxury market is experiencing a significant downturn, with Interbrand reporting a 5% drop in top luxury brand valuations. Experts declare the "luxury supercycle is over," citing weakened Chinese spending, retreating aspirational consumers, and Gen Z's disinterest. While Hermès and some jewelry brands thrive, many major players like LVMH, Kering (Gucci), Nike, Chanel, and Dior valuations are down, indicating a "structural demand problem."

    https://www.forbes.com/sites/pamdanziger/2025/10/24/declining-consumer-demand-pushes-luxury-brand-valuations-down/

    Will this affect the high-end hi-fi market? Hard to think it won't...

    In parallel to this focus on the luxury market in recent years, I think with the growth of spaces like Audio Science Review and the explosion of "Chi-Fi" (which only ignorant and biased people hear as pejorative), with plenty of (objectively) excellent and affordable products invading the hi-fi markets, the average audiophile today has simultaneously a lot more access to good (objective) info about products and a lot more good and affordable products to choose from. If the high-end adventure ends up not being a good one, I guess it will be quite hard for brands to return for common audiophiles... The whole "we don't care about blindfold tests or measurements" or "the more expensive, the better it sounds" mantras don't work as well today as they did a few years ago. Right?

    Anyway, just a few thoughts.

    Cheers,

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    1. Thanks for the well-expressed thoughts Miguel,
      Regarding "low cost vs. gourmet" and the gutting of middle-priced products, I think this sadly also reflects societal wealth disparity where the "rich get richer" and middle class under increasing strain with inflation and younger generations wondering if they'll ever own a home or even a stable career.

      I try not to talk too much politics on the blog but I see this as all just the inevitable "blow off" in the age of Trump with his corrupt, undisciplined, narcissistic, nepotistic policies focused on mere financial gains at a time when the world is spiraling into impossible to service debt (including here in Canada). Not that we weren't going to get to this point anyways, but Trump is clearly taking things to the "next level" (in some ways kind of reminds me of unbalanced audiophilia talked about with Ken Fritz). If we look back in a few years, I would not be surprised if we're in the last inning of the "Gilded Age" of the 21st Century.

      Cracks are already showing with the decline of luxury brands as per the Forbes article. This has affected the Swiss watch market as well. And with tariffs, massive decline in American imports of these products.

      I agree, there should be no pejorative bias in appreciating the "Chi-Fi" products. No different than suggesting that there's a "Chi-Phone" market when we're using Made in China iPhones and such. Given the interconnected world, the fantasies of somehow Making America Great with recent policies will be very painful.

      Indeed it might be late for the "high-end" luxury audiophile sector to grow at this point but as with every crisis, innovative business leaders can still find opportunities! Who knows, maybe this is the time to burn off the chaff and revitalize audio for another time down the road. An opportunity to clear off the legacy media, dump snake oil salesmen, scam companies without meaningful purpose.

      Regardless, the future will be very interesting! I think personally and among friends and family, we need to make sure the financial house is in order to get through the next few years.

      But I digress... 😉

      Yeah, let's make sure as audiophiles not to be afraid of doing things like blind listening tests, and respect what objective testing tells us about the nature of these things we buy!

      Delete
  3. Hi Arch: I think the hottest button of all occurs when I go into a brick and mortar Audio Store and the salesperson treats me as a second class citizen because I am more interested in a Kef Stand mount than a pair of Wilson whatevers. Whever i get one of those "Of course it's better, you get what you pay for!" I just walk out the door, and so should everyone else. There are so many snake oil salesmen and rip off artists in the audio marketplace, you most definitely better not only know what you're doing with regard to product, but you better also have an unshakable frame when you deal with these jerks. They are not your friend, and you are not the in world to make them happy. Quite the opposite, and no one walking into one of those store should ever forget that.

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    1. Hey Phoenix,
      Thankfully the audio stores here in town seem to be pretty OK when I've visited although it has been a number of years! I need to do a little scouting and see what the attitude is like now. Then again, I hear that Rolex Authorized Dealers can be pretty unfriendly as well.

      As a tech guy, I don't know how they survive these days other than needing to sell the higher priced items that are hard to get through online sales and I guess provide service for set-up and optimization. Nonetheless, I do hope customers are treated well and important that they not miseducate with myths and snake oil. If I were in their position, I can imagine how hard it must be given the temptation of presumably higher margins on stuff like expensive cables to talk them up!

      Clearly a poor salesperson if they're discriminating because you wanted KEF standmounts! Just bad to not make a sale and at least have the opportunity to build a relationship with a repeat customer who might want Wilsons in the future. 😒

      Delete
  4. The pursuit of high-fidelity audio through expensive equipment, as championed by publications like Stereophile, often misleads audiophiles by emphasizing component upgrades over the critical influence of listening environments.

    Stereophile’s focus on high-end products—such as amplifiers costing $20,000 or DACs exceeding $10,000—targets enthusiasts who, having started with affordable yet capable systems (e.g., Sony or Samsung electronics), seek superior sound quality. However, this pursuit is fundamentally flawed, as stereophonic audio inherently delivers an illusion of soundstage rather than a true replication of live music. The absence of a universal acoustic reference complicates this quest, leaving audiophiles chasing an elusive realism through ever-costlier equipment.

    The logical progression for many begins with upgrading components, driven by the belief that higher prices correlate with enhanced fidelity. Yet, as systems evolve, so do the rules of engagement. Audiophiles often modify their listening spaces—adding acoustic treatments, bass traps, or even dedicating entire rooms—to accommodate high-end equipment. These environmental changes can profoundly improve sound quality by reducing unwanted reflections or standing waves, often contributing more to perceived improvements than the equipment itself. Regrettably, the credit is frequently misattributed to costly amplifiers or speakers rather than the optimized acoustics.

    This cycle of upgrades and modifications leads to a critical oversight: few audiophiles revisit their original, affordable components in these refined environments to assess whether the expensive gear truly delivers superior performance. For instance, reintroducing a modest Sony receiver into a treated room with high-end speakers might reveal that much of the perceived improvement stems from acoustics, not the $50,000 amplifier. The high-end industry, including publications like Stereophile, rarely encourages such comparisons, as their business model relies on promoting luxury products as the path to sonic excellence.
    The true challenge lies in recognizing that stereo reproduction, by its nature, cannot fully replicate the live experience. While high-end equipment, such as the Accuphase A-300 with its low noise and high damping factor, offers measurable advantages in specific scenarios, these are often inaudible in typical listening conditions due to human auditory limits. Instead of endlessly pursuing marginal gains through costly components, audiophiles would benefit from prioritizing room acoustics and exploring multichannel formats, which can enhance spatial realism more effectively than two-channel systems.

    By acknowledging the primacy of the listening environment and conducting objective comparisons, the audio community can move beyond the illusion of realism and focus on meaningful improvements, ensuring that the pursuit of fidelity remains grounded in reality rather than aspiration.

    ST

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    1. Wow, very well said ST,
      I think that point about the evolution of room acoustics over time and improvements being attributed to the increasingly-priced gear instead of the room is an important one. Indeed, once an audiophile gets to the point of spending $80k on dual-mono D'Agostino M400 MxV amps + $$$ pre-amp, how many would try reverting back to say a very reasonable Sony TA-A1ES integrated amp (~$2k MSRP, I've seen it <$1000 used these days) and try unbiased listen?! Highly unlikely.

      And so it goes... As much as I wish it wasn't the case, at some point, maybe it's inevitable that the audiophile community has to end up at odds with the Industry. They need to make money with products built on mature technology with little generational benefits, pushing further into luxury pricing, while the audiophile community is increasingly recognizing this and rightly suspicious of advertising hype.

      Indeed going multichannel is the next step. That'll take some convincing for the traditionalists who believe 2-channels is all we ever need and DSP "damages" sound, also a hard one for the LP-loving analogue audiophiles stuck with 2 channel media. Who knows if the High-End will overcome this at some point or if magazines like Stereophile will devote more space to discuss multichannel/Atmos. Without growth, we're looking at stagnation ahead.

      We're certainly living in interesting times!

      BTW: Great work on the new versions of CTXMatrixBeta!

      Delete
    2. Hi ST,

      I agree — I’ve been saying the same as you as well. The listening room acoustics are near the top as a priority for audio transparency.

      I’ve seen people who believe that an expensive system in a room with poor acoustics will perform better than budget bookshelf speakers and equipment.

      High audio transparency doesn’t need to cost multiple thousands of pounds.

      Delete
    3. hi Dan,

      I don’t think we paid much attention to room acoustics in the beginning. I’m lucky enough to have experienced the full journey—from gramophone to DSD—but it was only in later years, after upgrading to so-called state-of-the-art equipment, that I started paying attention to room acoustics. Going back to Archi’s article: high-end audio isn’t really about sound, it’s about status. Sound becomes the justification—or excuse—to flaunt status.

      Long ago, during my stereo days, there was a well-known audiophile here. He used to drop by often, bringing fans to listen to my system. He also introduced me to many setups around the area. One day, he invited me to his place. I said okay and called a few audiophile buddies to come along. The first thing I heard was this—okay, this happened almost 20 years ago, so the words may not be exact: “Don’t waste your time. He uses a JVC player, and his system is in a 10-by-8 bedroom. Cheap speakers stacked on top of each other.” So no one wanted to join.

      However, I decided to go alone—and they were right. Barely enough space for two people to squeeze in, with the mattress rolled to the side. I think he moved it out of the room just to make space. And yes, it was a JVC CD player. The amps were unfamiliar. He had some cheap consumer subwoofers. Then he started playing music, including my favorites. I listened attentively and just said, “I think I’ve overspent.”

      It was a fine-sounding system. Sure, it could not hit 100 dB, but for actual listening, it was well-tuned. That incident bugged me for a long time. How could people dismiss his system when the sound was genuinely good—better than some high-end setups out there?

      So yes, it’s about status. About trophies—equipment to display and show off. That’s what this hobby has become. Not really about sound, except for a few. And these few don’t even bother with the things Stereophile recommends. Like Toole, who placed his main speakers upside down. I don’t think any audiophile would dare do that with their own speakers.

      And Archimago—thank you for your continued encouragement. The latest version I’m testing has four EQ dials. Will be sharing that soon.

      Delete
  5. Hi amigo,

    It will be interesting to see what happens when this current generation of children grow into adults. With AI now being part of everyday life, it will soon become very obvious that all these audio magazines and YouTube “stars” promoting luxury are simply copying what AI can generate in a couple of seconds.

    Originality will disappear amongst these people, and I think others will realise that they might as well generate their own AI response if they want "subjective opinions” in fanciful words. I think people will become cynical and impatient — sifting through nonsense is very tiring.

    When they’re adults, money and luxuries will probably be scarce. My guess is that luxury audio will stop promoting the nonsense of having “better” audio transparency and instead focus on the hard work of the makers, and the years spent studying and practising.

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  6. Vienna is incredible, one of the best live music cities on Earth. I lived part time near there and never got tired of it. And "live" includes some incredible street performers- I used to see a Russian trio with balalaikas and accordion playing Mozart...

    Anyway, I had a luxury ($14,000, I think) DAC in house for a couple months for an AudioXpress article. And the high price paid for some very fancy engineering- it really did measure better, in most respects, than excellent but lower priced units. Does that translate to better sound? The company which makes it thinks so. For me, no, but if money were no object and I wanted objectively the best, at least I'd be getting something real rather than imaginary.

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  7. Dear Archimago ...

    long time lurker - but this time I HAD to comment: I am deeply impressed with your two last posts on "Hi-End", the comparison between the luxury watch industry and your reaction on the Stereophile article from Rogier von Bakel.

    If I were an editor-in-chief at Stereophile I would read your recommendations thoroughly. With the availabilty of transparent DACs and amplifiers in the lower to mid price range there is definitely no need to invest in a Rolex Daytona to measure time, any Timex will do - as will a RME DAC or a Benchmark amp.

    So yes, I strongly disagree with Stereophile's equation that more money equals better sound. I'm fine with anyone spending more money on craftmanship and/or design and IMHO Stereophile could and should focus on this aspect of hi end products while ensuring that these products measure well by introducing something in the likes of "COSC" (and refrain from cable voodoo and other nonsense).

    Thanks a lot for your thoughts and those insightful and well-written posts!
    Mark

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