The problem is you simply don't know what
this guy „knows“. When you listen to what you call hi fi it is mid fi at best.
You have to skim through this article, if for no other reason than at least to “learn” about sonic tuning of your cables and your equipment. It’s the worst kind of reiterating all the snake oil but with the voice of knowledge or more precisely “knowledge”.
But this article hits exactly my point. People are being nostalgic about the “production philosophy” and not the end specs of a product. A lot of first half of the twentieth century production had this “what is the best product I can make and still make it affordable” approach. While today it is more of “what is the absolute Ryan-air minimum of quality needed in order to push a product and not being litigated”.
Fast production is all about specs and features, specs and feature… and it should work at least as long as the warranty states, but it is mostly being regarded as tomorrow’s crap/junk/garbage/depot dweller or in best case scenario recycled raw material for the next tomorrow’s garbage.
People read this out of the product; they are on some level aware of this. And they don’t particularly like it. It is condescending; “you don’t know any better anyway, so why would we waste time and money to teach you, “this or that” is the product for you and this is the price we’d like you to pay, now buy or shut up”.
This “what is the best product I can make and still make it affordable” philosophy heavily relies on those “happy people working in bad conditions”; there was a survey in the nineteenth century where workers were being asked what they don’t like about their work place. Bad light was one of the things, but before anything was done about the issue, productivity had risen and the question was why? As it turned out, the very fact that someone asked the workers made them feel as being included/taken care of, taken seriously, important and they liked this so they were happier and worked better. Unfortunately only thing that sprung out of this is today’s mandatory team building which should instill that same feeling in workers while the light bulbs are never to be replaced anyway.
Mid twentieth audio products “treated” you as a gentleman audiophile with a little less in his pocket. Today my Yamaha has some loose space on the volume knob that you feel when changing direction (turning the volume down and suddenly starting to turn it up will show some empty room or what would you call that). As oppose to a gentleman audiophile, I read this as; you’re dumb, fat greasy piece of sh… in your track suit on the couch all day, devoid of all critical and aesthetic judgement and one of your bros is likely to poor some cheap sh… beer all over it and it goes to the depot. Any and all perfectionism is wasted on you. Or in other words “give the consumer what he wants”
Nothing can last forever, but there’s a huge difference between: “well we can at least try to make it last forever” and “meh, what the f… then, just put it together and sell it” approach.
In conclusion, audio is all about technology and today you can make equipment better than any from the past. It is simply that producers “choose” not to
This is an overstatement for the sake of the joke, but in relative terms, today’s products are not as good as yesterdays. Let me just try to clarify this: in the 70’ the best you could do is grade 5, but that would be expensive so you chose to make it -4 and that was fair. Today your best is 10, but you choose to make -3 and just make a prettier ad. And this is not fair (although in some cases today’s -3 is better than yesterday’s -4, but that’s why I said in relative terms).
I think that people wrongfully ascribe this emotional response to a product as its performance and I think this is why all sentimental people will always say it used to be better. A good test for this that comes to mind is taking a shell of a legendary Marantz from the 60’ and putting today’s electronics inside. My guess is people will say: aaaah, hear that angel sound, you can’t measure it or explain it, but it is just better and that’s a fact.
I think you can’t measure it because it is not inside of the box you’re listening to, but inside your heart and mind. And I honestly think this explains the whole issue and that the mentioned test would prove this.