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#41
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On Nov 28, 10:42 pm, "MC" wrote:
"Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... Also, people are better educated and more knowlegable, and simply have more things to spend their money on. The stereo system is far from being the only home entertainment option. Yes... right now people seem more interested in having the sound come from as many directions as possible. ![]() LOL! I love the way you phrased that . . . .suggesting not so much the quality in a surround setup but more of the whiz bang in 3D ![]() CD |
#42
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Nov 28, 5:06 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Jenn" wrote in message Sure, there are some audiophiles who claim they can only enjoy via systems that they judge to be SOTA. My highest priority target. You have "targets"? They call themselves music-lovers but in fact they are techno-freaks & materalistic status-seekers. Yep, if they claim to be music lovers but can only enjoy music through SOTA gear, I would agree. Some folks, OTOH, like both. I see no problem with that. Others (an I suppose that I'm in this camp) LIKE to listen in that fashion and enjoy it when they can, but can enjoy music reproduced by a clock radio. You still remember that you are a musician. That's good! ;-) Perhaps it's a bit like those who enjoy what they consider to be fine wine: Some will only drink what they consider to be the best and all else is poison, others really enjoy fine wine but can also enjoy throwing back some stuff that comes in a cardboard box. ;-) Thing is, some of that cardboard box stuff really isn't all that bad. Right. Just as some "mass market" audio gear isn't all that bad. |
#43
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 15:28:01 -0800, bob wrote
(in article ): On Nov 28, 10:41 pm, Sonnova wrote: Good question. But were there "cheap speakers" 30 years ago? Everything was pretty cheap then and like I mentioned earlier, a pair of Dynaco A-25s was less than $200 and they're still excellent. Cheap speakers that cost, in adjusted dollars, what cheap speakers cost today would have been $25 -$100/pair and I just don't remember what they were like. Well, I'm sure you could get speakers for almost nothing back then at Lafayette or Radio Shack, and what can be had for $200/pr today would certainly be a huge improvement. But a better comparison would be something like $200 30 years ago vs. $500 today. bob I would think that things have scaled about 10X since 1969 and probably 5 to 7X from 1977. So, $200 30 years ago would be more like 1 to 1.5K today. |
#44
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 15:31:12 -0800, Randy Yates wrote
(in article ): Sonnova writes: [...] But were there "cheap speakers" 30 years ago? Yes. For example, the Bose 301s. http://cgi.ebay.com/Bose-Model-301-b...t-Ad_W0QQitemZ 110169155405QQcmdZViewItem Everything was pretty cheap then Not true. For example, the Klipschorns were, in 1983, around $2500/pair - a "bit" more than most low-end stuff. But Klipschorns were always very expensive and pretty much of an acquired taste. You could drive them to ear splitting volume with a typical teen-ager's transistor radio, they were that efficient, but I never thought that they sounded like music any more than Altec Lansing's A-7 Voice Of The Theater speakers did - which is to say, not very much. |
#45
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Arny Krueger wrote:
"MC" wrote "Arny Krueger" wrote Also, people are better educated and more knowlegable, and simply have more things to spend their money on. The stereo system is far from being the only home entertainment option. Yes... right now people seem more interested in having the sound come from as many directions as possible. ![]() Well, that's how things work in the real world of live sound. I don't think we're doing the best job of duplicating it, though. i agree. ![]() movies are doing it "better" and REAL people are BUYING! fwiw, i find it darkly amusing that hi end audio is riding the coattails of multichannel movie sound bill |
#46
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Nov 29, 7:28 pm, Sonnova wrote:
Well, I'm sure you could get speakers for almost nothing back then at Lafayette or Radio Shack, and what can be had for $200/pr today would certainly be a huge improvement. But a better comparison would be something like $200 30 years ago vs. $500 today. bob I would think that things have scaled about 10X since 1969 and probably 5 to 7X from 1977. So, $200 30 years ago would be more like 1 to 1.5K today. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is your friend: http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl Multipliers are 3.45 for 1977 and 5.69 for 1969. So $200 in 1977 would be $689 today. bob |
#47
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 15:32:21 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Sonnova" wrote in message Good question. But were there "cheap speakers" 30 years ago? Everything was pretty cheap then and like I mentioned earlier, a pair of Dynaco A-25s was less than $200 and they're still excellent. Not really. I have a friend who has a pair in excellent condition, which I've heard lately. OK for workshop speakers, but not ready for prime usage. They don't sound bad, but their woofers and tweeters don't perform all that well by modern standards. The basic "Aperiodic" design was more hype than substance. Damped ports aren't as effective as well-tuned ports. The price paid was reduced bass extension for the size of the box and the level of efficiency. The tweeter was not bad, but the best cheap modern drivers are smoother and have more power-handling capacity. The woofer had only modest linear travel by modern standards, and the crossover was simplistic. I had a pair of A-25s and I don't remember them as grimly as you do. Of course I haven't heard a pair in years, but I seemed to remember the bass being pretty good quality at the time and that the speakers sounded pretty smooth. I replaced them with a pair of A-50's which, though they had deeper bass, I didn't think sounded as good. I replaced them with a pair of Infinity "bookshelf" speakers (damn big bookshelf!) I don't remember the model numbers but they were huge. Big 12" woofers (paper cones coated in some kind of tar-like substance) and a planar midrange and tweeter made for Infinity by a company called Strathern in Ireland. Infinity called them "EMIM" for the midrange and EMIT for the tweeter. They were pretty good (except that the EMIMs and EMITs were unrelaible, IIRC) and I kept them until I scraped enough money together to buy my first pair of Magneplanars - the eight-panel Tympani IIIBs. Cheap speakers that cost, in adjusted dollars, what cheap speakers cost today would have been $25 -$100/pair and I just don't remember what they were like. Pretty grim. The boxes usually had real wood veneer, but the contents were usually pretty grim. One cheaper speaker from about that era that was well-received was the Realistic Minimus 7. I have a number of them that are still in good condition. I did some listening and measuring a few years back and was surprised with how mediocre they are by modern standards. One real surprise is that the tweeters had a lot of broadband non-linear distortion, probably due to a bad motor design. The woofer is fragile and has a relatively short stroke by modern standards. Again, not really bad, but not good, even at the price point which went down to about $30 each on sale. I used to have a pair of the Minimus 7's too. I used them for early surround speakers for video for a time. I didn't like them even as "workshop" speakers. No bass, screechy, metallic highs. Yechhh! |
#48
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Sonnova" wrote in message
On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 15:28:01 -0800, bob wrote (in article ): On Nov 28, 10:41 pm, Sonnova wrote: Good question. But were there "cheap speakers" 30 years ago? Everything was pretty cheap then and like I mentioned earlier, a pair of Dynaco A-25s was less than $200 and they're still excellent. Cheap speakers that cost, in adjusted dollars, what cheap speakers cost today would have been $25 -$100/pair and I just don't remember what they were like. Well, I'm sure you could get speakers for almost nothing back then at Lafayette or Radio Shack, and what can be had for $200/pr today would certainly be a huge improvement. But a better comparison would be something like $200 30 years ago vs. $500 today. I would think that things have scaled about 10X since 1969 and probably 5 to 7X from 1977. So, $200 30 years ago would be more like 1 to 1.5K today. One reasonable price indexing scheme might be a doubling every 14 years. 1969 was 38 years ago, so there have been about 2 and a half doublings. $200 in 1969 would be worth about $500 today. However, there has been quite a bit of general improvement in price/performance. For example a receiver with a certain power rating that cost $300 in 1969 would probably be outclassed by one that cost $80-150 today. I paid $900 for a CDP 101 in 1983, and it is easily outperformed for playing CDs by a DVD player that costs less than $50-80 today. It also does all that crazy video stuff! ;-) |
#49
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Thu, 29 Nov 2007 19:36:16 -0800, bob wrote
(in article ): On Nov 29, 7:28 pm, Sonnova wrote: Well, I'm sure you could get speakers for almost nothing back then at Lafayette or Radio Shack, and what can be had for $200/pr today would certainly be a huge improvement. But a better comparison would be something like $200 30 years ago vs. $500 today. bob I would think that things have scaled about 10X since 1969 and probably 5 to 7X from 1977. So, $200 30 years ago would be more like 1 to 1.5K today. The Bureau of Labor Statistics is your friend: http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl Multipliers are 3.45 for 1977 and 5.69 for 1969. So $200 in 1977 would be $689 today. bob OK. I go by things like car prices (average car in 1969 was $2500, average car today, $25,000+) A gallon of premium gas ($0.35 in 1969, $3.50 today) a loaf of premium white bread ($0.25 in 1969, $2.50 today) an average house ($20,000 in 1969, $200,000+ today - depending on location, of course). I guess the BLS figures it another way. |
#50
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Nov 28, 5:05 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
Long car rides turn out to be where I do most of my listening for study. Just curious: what music do you study and for what purpose? |
#51
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Jenn" wrote in message
On Nov 28, 5:05 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote: Long car rides turn out to be where I do most of my listening for study. Just curious: what music do you study and for what purpose? Stuff I record, for the purpose of QC and figuring out what to do better next. |
#52
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Nov 29, 5:32 pm, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Sonnova" wrote in message Good question. But were there "cheap speakers" 30 years ago? Everything was pretty cheap then and like I mentioned earlier, a pair of Dynaco A-25s was less than $200 and they're still excellent. Not really. I have a friend who has a pair in excellent condition, which I've heard lately. OK for workshop speakers, but not ready for prime usage. They don't sound bad, but their woofers and tweeters don't perform all that well by modern standards. The basic "Aperiodic" design was more hype than substance. Damped ports aren't as effective as well-tuned ports. The price paid was reduced bass extension for the size of the box and the level of efficiency. The tweeter was not bad, but the best cheap modern drivers are smoother and have more power-handling capacity. The woofer had only modest linear travel by modern standards, and the crossover was simplistic. Cheap speakers that cost, in adjusted dollars, what cheap speakers cost today would have been $25 -$100/pair and I just don't remember what they were like. Pretty grim. The boxes usually had real wood veneer, but the contents were usually pretty grim. One cheaper speaker from about that era that was well-received was the Realistic Minimus 7. I have a number of them that are still in good condition. I did some listening and measuring a few years back and was surprised with how mediocre they are by modern standards. One real surprise is that the tweeters had a lot of broadband non-linear distortion, probably due to a bad motor design. The woofer is fragile and has a relatively short stroke by modern standards. Again, not really bad, but not good, even at the price point which went down to about $30 each on sale. I have a pair of Dynaco A10's from 1972 10 inch aperiodic. Compared to today they sound inefficient, slow, and a bit lifeless. But you could not touch the build quality of them today for under $500. The enclosures are a nice example of fine cabinet making and I was thinking of putting in some newer drivers and retuning them. They were my first serious purchase out of high school, today they are my garage speakers with original grill cloth too. |
#53
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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I would not call that derission. I'd call into question that conductor's
ural abilities when listen to live music. "bob" wrote in message ... On Nov 25, 11:25 am, Sonnova wrote: This is very true. I'm friends with a very well known symphony orchestra conductor. He listens to music on one of the first generation Bose "Wave" radios with the built-in CD player and he has a cassette deck connected to the aux inputs on the back! The master tapes of the orchestra that I make for him get cut to CD and that's what I give him (it used to be cassette tapes before He got the Bose - which was a gift from a lady friend of his). When I'm over at his house he's invariably listening to my recordings of his orchestra on that Bose. It seems to meet his needs. When he's over ay my place and I put one of his performances on my stereo he listens intently, muttering to himself about some sloppy ensemble playing or missed cues, but never mentions how much better the orchestra sounds on my system than on his Bose. When I bring it up, he just says something non-committal like "Very nice," Sounds like one of those Average Joes you seem to enjoy deriding. bob |
#54
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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True. I personally have two listen modes. One is listening to the music, the
other is critical listening to the music on the playback system. Just a few handful of times I listened to a system that was so transparent (WATTS, Krell, Clear Audio) that both listening modes coincided. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Sonnova" wrote in message This is very true. I'm friends with a very well known symphony orchestra conductor. He listens to music on one of the first generation Bose "Wave" radios with the built-in CD player and he has a cassette deck connected to the aux inputs on the back! The master tapes of the orchestra that I make for him get cut to CD and that's what I give him (it used to be cassette tapes before He got the Bose - which was a gift from a lady friend of his). When I'm over at his house he's invariably listening to my recordings of his orchestra on that Bose. It seems to meet his needs. When he's over ay my place and I put one of his performances on my stereo he listens intently, muttering to himself about some sloppy ensemble playing or missed cues, but never mentions how much better the orchestra sounds on my system than on his Bose. When I bring it up, he just says something non-committal like "Very nice," I first learned this long ago when I had a college roomate who was a musician. He loved my stereo. When it came time for me to set him up, he specified something pretty humble by my standards at tht time. I think it was composed of a mid-fi receiver, a mid-line Garrard changer with Shure cartrdige, and a pair of AE4ax. The point is that if you love music, and particularly if you are a skilled musician, it really helps if you can extract the music from any particular set of sounds that you you hear. You need to hear yourself, and you need to hear other players that you work most closely with. The sonic environment for performing is vastly different than the one for listeners. In short, being able to enjoy music that is poorly reproduced is a worthwhile skill, not the disability that some would like to make it out to be. |
#55
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Wed, 6 Feb 2008 08:28:18 -0800, Rob wrote
(in article ): True. I personally have two listen modes. One is listening to the music, the other is critical listening to the music on the playback system. Just a few handful of times I listened to a system that was so transparent (WATTS, Krell, Clear Audio) that both listening modes coincided. "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Sonnova" wrote in message This is very true. I'm friends with a very well known symphony orchestra conductor. He listens to music on one of the first generation Bose "Wave" radios with the built-in CD player and he has a cassette deck connected to the aux inputs on the back! The master tapes of the orchestra that I make for him get cut to CD and that's what I give him (it used to be cassette tapes before He got the Bose - which was a gift from a lady friend of his). When I'm over at his house he's invariably listening to my recordings of his orchestra on that Bose. It seems to meet his needs. When he's over ay my place and I put one of his performances on my stereo he listens intently, muttering to himself about some sloppy ensemble playing or missed cues, but never mentions how much better the orchestra sounds on my system than on his Bose. When I bring it up, he just says something non-committal like "Very nice," I first learned this long ago when I had a college roomate who was a musician. He loved my stereo. When it came time for me to set him up, he specified something pretty humble by my standards at tht time. I think it was composed of a mid-fi receiver, a mid-line Garrard changer with Shure cartrdige, and a pair of AE4ax. The point is that if you love music, and particularly if you are a skilled musician, it really helps if you can extract the music from any particular set of sounds that you you hear. You need to hear yourself, and you need to hear other players that you work most closely with. The sonic environment for performing is vastly different than the one for listeners. In short, being able to enjoy music that is poorly reproduced is a worthwhile skill, not the disability that some would like to make it out to be. I certainly was not intimating that its a disability. Not caring about sound quality and caring more about how the group is playing than how the system sounds shows that the musician in question regards the reproduction apparatus as merely a tool. A tool to help him be a better conductor and to help him make the ensemble a better orchestra. After all, he has at his disposal the ultimate hi-fi and he stands before it week in and week out. Who needs a stereo system when you have REAL music at your fingertips and beck-and-call? Maybe the Maestro realizes that a Hi-Fi, any Hi-Fi, pales so completely in the face of the sound of real, live music played in real space, that the pursuit of that particular muse is futile and not worth the effort. |
#56
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On Wed, 6 Feb 2008 08:27:39 -0800, Rob wrote
(in article ): I would not call that derission. I'd call into question that conductor's ural abilities when listen to live music. "bob" wrote in message ... On Nov 25, 11:25 am, Sonnova wrote: This is very true. I'm friends with a very well known symphony orchestra conductor. He listens to music on one of the first generation Bose "Wave" radios with the built-in CD player and he has a cassette deck connected to the aux inputs on the back! The master tapes of the orchestra that I make for him get cut to CD and that's what I give him (it used to be cassette tapes before He got the Bose - which was a gift from a lady friend of his). When I'm over at his house he's invariably listening to my recordings of his orchestra on that Bose. It seems to meet his needs. When he's over ay my place and I put one of his performances on my stereo he listens intently, muttering to himself about some sloppy ensemble playing or missed cues, but never mentions how much better the orchestra sounds on my system than on his Bose. When I bring it up, he just says something non-committal like "Very nice," Sounds like one of those Average Joes you seem to enjoy deriding. bob That's not the point. The point is that this anecdote is illustrative of the discussion we had here some weeks ago about the difference between the listening priorities of musicians and audiophiles. The Maestro, obviously, can hear everything he needs to hear about his orchestra via the wave radio and doesn't give a whit about wide frequency response, low distortion, sound-stage, ambience retrieval, realistic listening levels, or any of the other things that audiophiles hold as important. He's listening for ensemble playing, dynamics, contrasts between sections, pace, missed entrance cues, etc., and all of these things seem to come accross adequately for him on a Bose Wave radio. And as for "deriding average Joes" I don't see where you get that. Average Joes don't care about those audiophile things either, so why deride them for having other interests? I don't deride others because they don't like to drive sports cars like I do. I don't deride others because they don't enjoy skeet shooting, I don't deride people because they're not interested in photography, so why should I deride someone for not having the level of interest in audio that I have? Who I will deride are those who claim to be audiophiles, post authoritatively here on this forum, and yet demonstrate with almost every post that their hearing or their powers of perception are so poor or underdeveloped that they, essentially cannot (or will not) hear. I.E. If it measures good, it is good. Shades of Julian Hirsch and all that. :-) |
#57
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Sonnova" wrote in message
... On Wed, 6 Feb 2008 08:27:39 -0800, Rob wrote (in article ): I would not call that derission. I'd call into question that conductor's ural abilities when listen to live music. "bob" wrote in message ... On Nov 25, 11:25 am, Sonnova wrote: This is very true. I'm friends with a very well known symphony orchestra conductor. He listens to music on one of the first generation Bose "Wave" radios with the built-in CD player and he has a cassette deck connected to the aux inputs on the back! The master tapes of the orchestra that I make for him get cut to CD and that's what I give him (it used to be cassette tapes before He got the Bose - which was a gift from a lady friend of his). When I'm over at his house he's invariably listening to my recordings of his orchestra on that Bose. It seems to meet his needs. When he's over ay my place and I put one of his performances on my stereo he listens intently, muttering to himself about some sloppy ensemble playing or missed cues, but never mentions how much better the orchestra sounds on my system than on his Bose. When I bring it up, he just says something non-committal like "Very nice," Sounds like one of those Average Joes you seem to enjoy deriding. bob That's not the point. The point is that this anecdote is illustrative of the discussion we had here some weeks ago about the difference between the listening priorities of musicians and audiophiles. The Maestro, obviously, can hear everything he needs to hear about his orchestra via the wave radio and doesn't give a whit about wide frequency response, low distortion, sound-stage, ambience retrieval, realistic listening levels, or any of the other things that audiophiles hold as important. He's listening for ensemble playing, dynamics, contrasts between sections, pace, missed entrance cues, etc., and all of these things seem to come accross adequately for him on a Bose Wave radio. And as for "deriding average Joes" I don't see where you get that. Average Joes don't care about those audiophile things either, so why deride them for having other interests? I don't deride others because they don't like to drive sports cars like I do. I don't deride others because they don't enjoy skeet shooting, I don't deride people because they're not interested in photography, But if they are intersested in photography I'd deride them if they compare reality using 24 X 36 mm contact prints vs. 16 X 20 inch prints as I would in comparing the sound of reality using a Bose CD/Wave Radio vs. a high end speaker system. See whatever you want, hear whatever you want but "hear no evil, see no evil, speak no evil"? so why should I deride someone for not having the level of interest in audio that I have? Who I will deride are those who claim to be audiophiles, post authoritatively here on this forum, and yet demonstrate with almost every post that their hearing or their powers of perception are so poor or underdeveloped that they, essentially cannot (or will not) hear. I.E. If it measures good, it is good. Shades of Julian Hirsch and all that. :-) |
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