Lunatique
1000+ Head-Fier
- Joined
- Mar 7, 2008
- Posts
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Quote:
So let me get this straight Lunatique: you have a half dozen great headphones already and are now chasing after one or more thousand dollar cans to get the sound that is just right for you, but you are not an audiophile (or audiofool as you like to put it)?
It just goes to show you what a relative term audiophile is. I am guessing that to the average Joe who for example decided to splurge and get the $29.95 headphones at Radio Shack rather than the $14.95 model and is quite satisfied that he is already getting great sound, might consider anyone spending even one hundred bucks for headphones an audiofool.
I suppose you have a point. To most people, even $150 is unthinkable for a pair of headphones, but back when even as a starving artist, I bought the Denon AH-D950 (flagship headphones from Denon in the previous generation), while I could barely pay rent or buy groceries. I guess music was just more important to me, especially when I was working late into the night every night as a comic book writer/artist back then, and I absolutely needed a good pair of headphones to keep me company without disturbing the neighbors or roommates.
When I was talking about being an audiofool, I was mainly talking about people spending money on the kind of thing that makes so little difference--like crazy cable upgrades, headphone amps that cost more than some expensive computers/laptops/large screen TV's, and it's likely in double-blind test they probably can't even hear the differences reliably. It's when people spend several thousand dollars just to get that 5% increase in quality (and often it's subjective preference of sonic signature anyway). It's like the people who insist on ripping non-lossy on their portable players, when they can't even tell the difference between a 192 VBR LAME encoded MP3 and a .wav file in a double-blind test. I just think it's important to balance this need to feel elite with some common sense and practicality.
Collecting headphones that actually do sound significantly different from one another is something else altogether--I don't consider that audiofool behavior. But having variant models that sound almost identical, or having multiple sets of the same model, or other collecting habits that have very little to do with the main point of headphones--which is for the love of music--that's audiofool territory to me. When the gear become the point, then you have lost your way IMO. But then again, I know lots of photography gear-heads that collect lenses and camera bodies and they barely ever take any photos beyond testing how sharp the lenses are or how good the high ISO performance is. That is not love for photography--that is just being a gear person. Not that there's anything wrong with it though--different strokes for different folks, and if gear is what makes them happy, then who can say it's wrong?
For me, personally, my purpose for collecting headphones is utilitarian--I'm looking for the pair(s) that fits my needs, and they are:
1) Music/Audio production
2) Enjoying music
3) Enjoying movies and video games
(Only when late at night and I don't want to disturb anyone. Normally I would definitely pick speakers over headphones. )
4) For traveling
Once I find the pair(s) that serves those needs as well as I hope, then I'll sell off the pairs that don't serve those needs well enough. I don't see any reason why I'd want or need more than two to three pairs of headphones total for all my needs. I really only need:
1) Closed-back for when I'm tracking in the studio.
2) Open-back/Semi-open-back for when I want to be able to hear the doorbell/phone ring.
3) IEM for traveling.
That's it. Three pairs for all my needs. I may stretch that number to more pairs if I want additional closed-back for when I'm tracking for more than one musician/singer, and that's definitely for logistical reasons.