Very much agree, but also Peter it’s worth noting the various outcomes of choice of platform to pursue recorded music has a range of potentials and constraints well beyond cost of hardware v software.
In the end the cost at the pump of playing music via a system ultimately is a summative thing… and none of us aren’t likely mostly maxed out here in this pursuit![]()
I sold my analogue setup and with it my vinyl collection once to do a gap year grand tour of the world… my gear at the time Sota sapphire, SME V and some Garrot brothers modified deccas and dynavectors bought us nearly 4 months in the Mediterranean alone. We were young and we travelled cheap.
I don’t now regret selling my LP collection as well because I’d realised much of it was audiophile selected so not primarily for musical performance but rather for sonic criteria. I’d started out a music lover and realised I’d been led by my particular audiophile focus to become somehow a sonic seeker
So I had all these albums which I’d curated more so on the basis of the recording credentials rather than just the musical performance. Ultimately it meant I’d play just a smallish selection of performances that largely satisfied both for music artistry and for sonic wonder when I needed a sonic moment with my system as well as a more musical moment with myself.
After a lifetime of enjoying what I had but also realising I wasn’t really where I wanted to be I’m happy that simply great performance and artistry and diversity in music and musical discovery is now my focus… and this is just more possible for me with my current setup. I’d love to have the option of a revisit to analogue as an addition but to get something that I’d be happy to use often would require a total budget equal to my current setup or more by the time I factored in a sufficiently sized library (2 thousand recordings at least) of great analogue vinyl with sufficiently great musical performances. Big call for me to have both… might genuinely be a beyond turntable setup but more for me a budget beyond than anything else.
But I definitely don’t want to find myself playing the same handful of records or reel to reel tapes over and over again… that’s just not loving music and living a full musical life in a way that’s become right for me.
We each get what we need out of this and it is not the same for each and not the same for us as we change along the way. After decades of going from being a simple music lover to being a full on audiophile I’ve found myself primarily to be a simple music lover again… but with a great system.
I love great music and great analogue and great digital and appreciate great sound as well. So instead till an opportunity comes up for something otherwise I focus on playing music on my current setup and stay focussed primarily on musical connection through engaging in music’s artistry and in further discovery. I generally listen to whole albums and each concert is different, each performance a new interpretation, seeing familiar artists as well and familiar music and also my favourite composers but expanding to realise how every performance can take you to a new appreciation and not just reliving those same handful of exact same moments in time… simply more like going to live music and having the musical journey unfold.
I’m lucky my system sounds natural and connective and the music is the focus. Sure I can do sonic appreciation (and love that quality as well) but it’s not where the system is centred. It always leads me back into the music.
I started out analogue (vinyl and reel to reel) and now visit a mate regularly who has the right setup and the right record library for enjoying that analogue window as well. But there is no shortage of access to great music at home, and for me the format that leads me to the greatest accessibility for that happens to be currently digital based and the musical return on investment is very full. If I was more purely sonically geared I might choose otherwise.
Tao, I largely agree with this, which is why Lampi stays my favorite thing in audio, over products from other parts of the audio chain. Because with it you can stream whatever you like at a touch and enjoy the experience. Maybe if someone already had a few thousand great LPs they will be able to listen to as much music, but those who don't have them already can afford very few good ones. And the quality of downloads and streaming will only get better. If I want to listen to different great classical performances, I have to book a seat at G's place or listen to it on a Lampi.
On any other system I can almost never investigate classical, i.e. if that person has exhausted his reserves on a great Kogan version of a concerto, he will not have that piece by 10 other violinists. Sure, the Kogan will sound phenomenal, but how many times can you repeat it? On a Lampi, I can switch between all the versions and enjoy them all.
That said, we have to differentiate between what is practical for you and me vs what is practical for WBF. If someone is willing to spend 100k for a TT, 25k for an arm, rotate 10k plus each on 10 carts, and an expensive phono, and listens to reissues and bad presses, that person will have been sonically and musically better off buying a STST motus II, SME 3012r + vdh or FR64 + some other cart, any nice used phono he gets from his friends, and buying expensive LPs with the difference. Kind of like what Jeff has done with his Garrard.
Similarly, if I had 400k, I would not buy a Cessaro Gamma or a vox, but I would buy a horns universum or get someone to build a custom, and put the 370k difference into originals. Sonically and musically, I would be much better off.
The point I want to emphasise with the above two examples is that even assuming one prefers the expensive speakers sonically more when comparing with reissues, that person will prefer the sonics of better LPs via gear he deems less. Also, the pleasure from owning more expensive gear subsides quickly - the sonic superiority of better LPs in a transparent system even with sonically lesser but good gear leads to better sound that can be enjoyed over a much longer period of time and if you have 370k worth of them, they will give you a thrilling feeling for a long time vs listening to compressed reissues over better gear. Of course, most of are thinking of a 10k difference not 370k, so this strategy is impractical for most.
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