What do you consider yourself? An audio enthusiast, or an audiophile?
Dec 11, 2013 at 9:55 PM Thread Starter Post #1 of 17

jasonb

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Just wondering what people think. Obviously is just a title and doesn't change the way we listen or whatever. I'm just curious whether only people with systems costing thousands of dollars consider themselves to be audiophiles, or whether you think somebody with only a modest setup can still be considered an audiophile. 
 
Are only the people who listen to vinyl or lossless deserving of the audiophile title? Or can somebody who sometimes listens to high bit rate MP3 be considered an audiophile? What about genre of music? Do you have to listen to jazz or classical to be worthy of this title? 
 
Just curious on peoples opinions on here. Be honest.
 
Dec 12, 2013 at 12:13 AM Post #3 of 17
I love music and i love DIY electronics so what does that make me?
 
I think to have fully blown "Audiophilia" one must possess that special mix of OCD and ADD in equal measure.  Me, i think i'm just an obsessed audio enthusiast.
 
Dec 14, 2013 at 7:42 PM Post #5 of 17
I don't care about tags, I just enjoy music and the gear helps me do that more. I enjoy the gear too though and sharing the enjoyment with people.
 
Dec 14, 2013 at 8:44 PM Post #6 of 17
"Audiophilia" seems to be about wanting and needing to hear differences instead of aiming for high-fidelity and transparency. I am only interested in the latter. Music always has preference though.
 
Dunno what labels there are for this. Sane and rational person?
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Dec 14, 2013 at 8:51 PM Post #7 of 17
Just a dude who likes music. Consuming it however. Superrig or boombox is ok with me.
 
Dec 14, 2013 at 9:02 PM Post #8 of 17
I've been called worst so, elitist audiophile snob , isn't at all that derogatory ;')
 
- Sticks, stones and arrows and all that
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 (prolly can't hear it with IEMs in)   
 
Dec 14, 2013 at 9:55 PM Post #9 of 17
I've kept this stuff mostly to myself so I don't think I've ever been called anything specific (nor have I ever cared to assign myself into one).
 
Now I just listen to music wherever and however I find them... So I guess in many ways I think I've went around the circle with this music listening hobby.
 
Dec 14, 2013 at 10:39 PM Post #10 of 17
It's always good to see new people around here.
 
Dec 15, 2013 at 3:50 PM Post #11 of 17
 
i think its all just speculation here... i guess everyone would have their own way of defining "audiophilia". 

personally, i see the term "audiophile" as derogatory. to me, an audiophile is one that got lost in all the nonsense and concentrates on the fallacies and "snake oil" aspects of the hobby. believing in the non proven "tweaks" and "upgrades", whereas an "audio enthusiast" as you put it is a guy that enjoys his music deeply, and seeks to achieve maximum enjoyment of his hobby through the best equipment he can afford (even if its "low-fi") and understanding how audio works.
thats how i see it.
i dont think you have to sink thousands (or more) of dollars into your equipment to be considered a "true" "audio enthusiast", i think its a matter of approach.
 
Dec 15, 2013 at 4:40 PM Post #12 of 17
  "Audiophilia" seems to be about wanting and needing to hear differences instead of aiming for high-fidelity and transparency. I am only interested in the latter. Music always has preference though.
 
Dunno what labels there are for this. Sane and rational person?
biggrin.gif
 

 
I sold the two most "high-fidelity" and "transparent" headphones I owned. The most technically transparent gear I've listened to music with didn't satisfy me. The most realistic-sounding (extreme levels of detail as if the instruments were being played in front of you) system I've heard used SET amps with horn speakers. Go figure. I guess Nelson Pass was right after all. 
smile.gif

 
Dec 15, 2013 at 4:44 PM Post #13 of 17
  I sold the two most "high-fidelity" and "transparent" headphones I owned. The most technically transparent gear I've listened to music with didn't satisfy me. The most realistic-sounding (extreme levels of detail as if the instruments were being played in front of you) system I've heard used SET amps with horn speakers. Go figure. I guess Nelson Pass was right after all. 
smile.gif


I guess not. You've just made my case.
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Dec 15, 2013 at 6:43 PM Post #14 of 17
I fall in the middle when it comes to audiophilia. Audiophiles wouldn't consider me an audiophile, but non-audiophiles would.
 
I listen to CDs at home, not SACD, but the reasons also include availablility and habit. I've compromised (so far) for portability by using mp4s instead of wav/flac. Maybe I'm compromising on headphones by buying several instead of one very expensive model, but I see that as a sensible trade-off.
 
I think audiophiles are much more interested in how gear sounds than I am, and more willing to spend money on sound than I am. Very good is good enough for me.
 
Dec 15, 2013 at 6:46 PM Post #15 of 17
I consider myself an audiophile but would never bother with lossless or vinyl. the former is unnecessary if you beleive that there is no gain to be had above mp3 192kbps vbr with a good encoder (joint stereo), and vinyl is worse than CD except that some vinyl records have better dynamic range but only because they aren't producing for the usual consumer.
 

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