- Audiophile
An audiophile, from
Latin "audio" [ [http://www.askoxford.com/concise_oed/audio "audio"] , Compact Oxford Dictionary, Accessed 2007-05-11] "I hear" and Greek "philos" [ [http://www.askoxford.com/results/?view=dict&freesearch=phile&branch=13842570&textsearchtype=exact "phile"] , Compact Oxford Dictionary, Accessed 2007-05-11] "loving," is an audio reproduction enthusiast, who typically listens to music on high-end-audio electronics. Audiophiles try to listen to music at a quality level that is as close to the original performance as possible. They use high-fidelity components to try to attain these goals. Many are music lovers who are passionate about high-quality music reproduction.DIY audio enthusiasts build their own equipment, especially loudspeakers.Audiophile values may be applied at all stages of music reproduction: the initial
audio recording , the production process, and the playback, which is usually in a home setting. "High-end audio " refers to expensive, high-quality, or esoteric products and practices used in the reproduction of music. Electronic gear used by audiophiles is typically sold at specialist shops. Prices range from not much more than mass market electronics to astronomical heights: high-end audio systems can easily cost more than a new automobile and in extreme cases can be hundreds of thousands of dollars. Most of this gear is produced by companies that specialize in high-end gear, although some also produce equipment used by audio professionals such as byrecording studio s.Audiophile magazines include "Hi-Fi News," "Hi-Fi Choice," "Hi-Fi World," and "What Hi-Fi? Sound and Vision" in the
United Kingdom as well as "Stereophile " and "The Absolute Sound " in the United States. Hobbyist audio societies also exist: "Stereophile"'s website has a list of such groups in the United States. [ [http://www.stereophile.com/audiophilesocieties/ Stereophile. List of audio societies] ]Audiophiles can purchase special recordings made with extra attention to sound quality; some companies specialize in re-issuing recordings for this purpose. Many audiophiles feel that vinyl records sound better than
compact disc s (CDs), and audiophile records are often remastered and pressed on extra-heavy virgin vinyl – 180g or 200g. Audiophiles also collect recordings in the high-resolution formats such asSuper Audio CD orDVD-Audio .Audio system components
An audio system typically consists of a number of components. These include one or more source components, one or more amplification components, and (for stereo), two or more
loudspeaker s.In addition, higher quality signal cables (analog audio, speaker, digital audio etc.) are often used to link these components. There may also be a variety of accessories. These may include equalizers, specialized equipment racks, speaker stands,
power conditioner s, devices to reduce or control vibration, and peripheral devices such as record cleaners, anti-static devices, phonograph needle cleaners, and many others.The interaction between the loudspeakers and the room plays an important part in sound quality. Sound vibrations are reflected from walls, floor and ceiling, and are affected by the contents of the room. Room dimensions can create
standing wave s. As a result, audiophiles sometimes design their listening rooms specifically for optimum audio reproduction. There are devices for room treatment that affect sound quality. Soft materials, such as draperies and carpets, reflect high-frequency sound less than hard walls and floors.While mass-market electronics are almost always solid state, some audiophiles appreciate the
tube sound , buying audiophile components that use a mix ofvacuum tube s and solid-state electronics.In addition to its sound quality, much high-end gear is designed for visual aesthetic appeal as well. Many devices, however, although striking in appearance, do not have universal appeal. They are sometimes large or must occupy specific locations in the listening room, which may be the living room. This leads to the issue humorously known among audiophiles as the wife-acceptance factor (WAF).
As with many hobbies, audiophiles use a certain amount of
jargon . This includes a variety of language describing the sound of a system. Examples include "bright" (excessive energy in the upper frequencies), "dark" (excessive midbass), or "lean" (insufficient midbass).Sound sources
Audiophiles play music from
phonograph record s,compact disc s (CDs) and from digitalaudio file format s that are uncompressed as well as ones that are compressed utilizinglossless data compression likeFLAC ,Windows Media Player LossLess andApple lossless . Since the early 1990s, CDs have become the most common source of high-quality music, obliterating themass market for records. Debate is sharp in this area, with analog proponents arguing that analog sound is "warmer" – has a bit of distortion which they find pleasant – and does not suffer from digital sound's alleged loss of audible information in the sampling process, while digital proponents point out that analog formats as having a smaller dynamic range, greater deviations in frequency response, and greaterdistortion , which lessens sound quality. Nevertheless, turntables, tonearms, andmagnetic cartridge s are among the most exotic and lavish high-end audio products despite the difficulties of keeping records free from dust and the delicate set-up associated with turntables.The 44.1 kHz
sampling rate of the CD format, in theory, restricts CD information losses to above the theoretical upper-frequency limit ofhuman hearing – 20 kHz, seeNyquist limit . Some believe, however, that the brick-wall filter used by CD players to remove ultrasonic noise can create audible distortion. Newer formats such asDVD-Audio and Super Audio Compact Disc (SACD), with sampling rates of 96 kHz or higher, have been developed in an attempt to address this criticism.Despite the popularity of
MP3 digital-audio players, some audiophiles criticize these devices because of their reliance on lossy-data compression even though at highbit rate s, the resulting files are transparent. [ [http://www.soundexpert.info/coders192.jsp Coders 192 kbit/s,] Konstantin Pupkov and Serge Smirnoff, Sound Expert, accessed 2008-05-24.] In MP3 encoding, musical information is lost in proportion to the degree of compression. Audiophiles who use a digital-audio player will often encode their music at higher bit rates to maintain sound quality at acceptable levels for casual listening. Many digital-audio players, however, can also accept uncompressed formats such asWAV (PCM), foregoing compression in order to retain quality. Some players, including iPods, also allow lossless-data-compression algorithms, which can compress audio files without degrading their sound quality. Popular lossless formats includeFLAC ,WavPack ,Monkey's Audio (APE),Apple Lossless ,True Audio ,Windows Media Audio 9 Lossless , andShorten .Although many digital-audio devices have integrated converters, there is a healthy demand for after-marketdigital-to-analog converter s.Amplifiers
Many audiophile systems separate the functions of the
preamplifier from that of the power amplifier. A preamplifier selects among several audio inputs, amplifies source-level signals (such as those from a turntable), and allows the listener to adjust the sound with volume and tone controls, switchable filters, etc. A power amplifier takes the "line-level" audio signal from the preamplifier and drives theloudspeaker s; typically the only control on a power amplifier is a gain (level) control (or none at all). Some audiophiles use two monophonic power amplifiers in a 'monoblock' configuration rather than one stereophonic power amplifier. Some use no preamplifier, instead connecting a CD player with a variable output directly to a power amplifier. Some go even further and use multiple amplifiers per loudspeaker to drive thewoofer , midrange,tweeter , etc. The terms "bi-amped" and "tri-amped" are sometimes used to describe these systems. There are, however, those who advocate using integrated amplifiers that combine a preamplifier and power amplifier in one box, arguing the benefits of minimalism.Audiophile amplifiers are available based on solid-state (
semiconductor ) technology, vacuum-tube (valve) technology, or hybrid technology—semiconductors and vacuum tubes. Very low powersingle-ended triode tube amplifiers are often claimed to provide superb sound when paired with appropriately sensitive loudspeakers. On the other hand, there are others who use solid-state amplifiers rated at over 1,000watts RMS per channel. Some believe that tube amplifiers, despite their much higher distortion, produce a more faithful and detailed reproduction in comparison to solid-state amplifiers. Others respond that this is largely a matter of opinion and personal taste, not proper reproduction of sound. Tube amplifiers, however, are heavily used in music "production", primarily in guitar amplifiers because of their soft clipping when overdriven.Loudspeakers
Audiophile
loudspeaker s use a wide variety of technologies and range greatly in size and cost. Starting at prices well under $500 budget audiophile loudspeakers are often the beneficiaries of more advanced technologies developed for higher priced flagship designs. Exotic loudspeaker designs and flagship models are some of the most extreme audiophile components and it is possible to spend more than $100,000USD on a pair of high-end loudspeakers.In contrast to the more exotic audiophile speakers, monitor speakers used by professional audio engineers are seldom priced at more than $5,000 per-pair.Fact|date=July 2008
The cabinet the loudspeaker is made from is referred to as the enclosure. There is a wide variety of loudspeaker enclosure designs, including sealed, ported, transmission line, infinite baffle, horn loaded, and aperiodic. The enclosure plays a major role in the sound of the loudspeaker.
The drivers are the actual sound-producing elements, commonly referred to as
tweeter s,midrange s,woofer s, andsubwoofer s. Driver designs include dynamic, electrostatic, magneplanar, ribbon, planar, ionic, and servo-actuated. Drivers are made from various materials, including paper pulp, polypropylene, kevlar, aluminum, magnesium, beryllium, and vapor-deposited diamond.The direction and intensity of the output of a loudspeaker, called dispersion or polar response, has a large effect on its sound. Various methods are employed to control the dispersion. These methods include monopolar, bipolar, dipolar, 360 degree, horn, waveguide, and line source. These terms refer to the configuration and arrangement of the various drivers in the enclosure.
The positioning of loudspeakers in the room and of the optimum listening position (referred to as the "sweet spot") is of great importance in producing optimum sound. Loudspeaker output is influenced by interaction with room boundaries, particularly bass response, and high frequency transducers are directional, or "beaming." In addition, audiophiles care a great deal about accurate stereo representation of sound. A typical placement is for the loudspeakers and the listening position to form roughly an equilateral triangle, with the loudspeakers a few feet from the back wall.
Accessories
Some audiophiles use a wide variety of accessories and fine-tuning techniques, otherwise known as "tweaks," to improve the sound of their systems. These tweaks include: filters to clean the electricity; equipment racks to isolate components from floor vibrations; specialty power cables, interconnect cables (e.g., between preamplifier and power amplifier), and loudspeaker cables; loudspeaker stands (and footers to isolate them from the stands); and room treatments – to name but a few. One also frequently sees an accusation of "bogus accessories" such as CD treatments – edge markers, spray-on cleaners, and destaticizers, about which the assertion has been made that audiophiles who claim to hear an improvement can never identify the treated CD in a blind test. [ [http://www.theaudiocritic.com/back_issues/The_Audio_Critic_26_r.pdf "The Ten Biggest Lies in Audio,"] Peter Aczel, "The Audio Critic," issue number 26, page 7 (PDF page 8), accessed 2007-11-03.]
Room treatments typically consist of sound-absorbing materials placed strategically within a listening room to reduce the amplitude of early reflections, and to adjust resonance modes. Room treatments can be expensive and difficult to optimize, but are considered by many to be the most effective of the many available tweaks.
Headphones
Another, less expensive, practice of some audiophiles is the use of premium
headphones . Most audiophiles-standard headphones retail in the region of $60-$500, although it is certainly possible to spend upwards of $14,000 (e.g. theSennheiser HE-90 [cite web
url=http://gadgets.luxist.com/2005/12/14/sennheiser-he-90-headphones
title=Sennheiser HE 90 Headphones
publisher=Luxist
first=Deidre
last=Woollard
date=December 14 2005
accessdate=2007-06-30] ). Most headphones marketed to audiophiles are a tiny fraction of the cost of comparable speaker systems, and do not require any room adjustment for music enjoyment.Running afoul of communitynoise regulation s or even disturbing roommates can be avoided.Newer canalphones, while as expensive as their larger counterparts, can be driven by less powerful outputs like portable devices.Testing
Audiophiles are split into two separate schools of thought regarding testing. Objectivists believe that
audio system measurements and double blind testing is of the greatest importance. Subjectivists believe that measured performance can not account for all discernible differences in sound quality and rely on extended listening tests to form an opinion. Some subjectivists do believe that listening discernment should be repeatable and based only on sound, and approve of blind testing.Beliefs
Minimalism
Even though there is general agreement on the goal, opinions vary widely among designers and listeners on how best to achieve high fidelity. One design principle is
minimalism . Given that each step in capturing, storing, and playing back music may degrade it, some audiophiles believe that the fewer and simpler the stages, the better. Many audiophile components, for example, lacktone control circuits , since it is felt that these may degrade theaudio quality while moving the sound away from the ideal.The minimalist subjectivist assertion is that music contains elements which cannot be measured by electronic instruments, [cite web
url=http://www.stereophile.com/features/203/index11.html|title="Stereophile"
accessdate=2007-03-25 ] so the less one alters the original signal, the more likely it is that this unmeasurable quality is preserved.Objectivists, however, want to reasonably quantify and specify the effects of input source, amplifier set-up, system power, speaker configuration, etc. on the listening experience. This desire is complementary to purely subjective preferences in quantifying the perceptible effects of different equipment set-ups.
Restoration
While minimalists strive to keep the signal unmodified from
studio rendition to final listener output, a non-minimalist desires the opposite, and attempting to either restore the original environment or, in some cases, enhance the original rendition.DSP algorithm s such as real-time mono-to-stereo conversions,Sound Retrieval System (SRS), andEnvironmental Audio Extensions (EAX) manipulate the signals to enhance listener experience. EAX, for example, can simulate a room environment or simulate a stadium environment by usingmathematical acoustical algorithms to add echo orreverb to the signal, taking a rendition of a song and placing it in the simulated environment. For example, a recording could be sent through a DSP algorithm mimicking outdoor echo effects, which would not be present if the recording was captured directly from the instrument or in a studio designed to dampen any acoustical effects. Non-minimalists may also choose to manipulate the sound with anequalizer in order to enhance certainfrequency ranges that may have been lost during recording or that are not reproduced during playback. Minimalists would argue that these devices alter the natural quality of the sound.Analog sound vs. digital sound reproduction
Audiophiles differ in opinion over the relative value and performance of digital and analog media. Pro-digital audiophiles believe that digital technology's absence of clicks, pops, wow, flutter,
audio feedback , and rumble make it superior to records. They also assert that digital technology has a highersignal-to-noise ratio , has a widerdynamic range , has lesstotal harmonic distortion , and has a flatter and more extendedfrequency response . [cite news | url = http://www.mastersonaudio.com/audio/20030101.htm | title = The Decline of Vinyl and Its Timely Death |work = Ian G. Masters | date =January 1 2003 | journal = mastersonaudio.com ] cite news | url = http://www.soundstageav.com/mastersonaudio/20050415.htm | title = Vinyl Hooey |work = Ian G. Masters | date =April 15 2005 | journal = mastersonaudio.com ] Pro-analog audiophiles believe that analog sound lacks the deleterious effects caused by the analog to digital conversion necessary to produce CDs and therefore analog music reproduction from records played on a properly configured turntable/tonearm setup is superior to digital music reproduction from CDs played on CD players.Equipment concerns
In the high-fidelity debate, some prefer vacuum-tube electronics over solid-state electronics, because despite inferior measured performance, some claim a warmer or more musical sound. Vacuum-tube amplifiers are often attacked as inferior because, in addition to their substantially higher
total harmonic distortion , they require rebiasing, are less reliable, generate more heat, are less powerful, and are often more expensive. [cite news | url = http://www.mastersonaudio.com/audio/20020901.htm | title = The Ongoing Debate about Amplifier "Sound" |work = Ian G. Masters | date =September 1 2002 | journal = mastersonaudio.com ]Some have long believed that sound quality was degraded by large levels of
negative feedback in amplifiers. Poorly-designed feedback systems can produce poor sound quality. Thus the association of feedback with poor sound quality is likely a reflection of poorly-designed power amplifiers that use feedback incorrectly. [cite web
url=http://www.hificritic.com/downloads/Archive_6.pdf
title="A Future Without Feedback?"
author=Martin Colloms
publisher="Stereophile"
date=January 1998
accessdate=2007-05-09
format=PDF]Criticism of audiophile marketing practices
Criticisms usually focus on claims around so-called "tweaks" and accessories beyond the core source, amplification, and speaker products. Examples of these accessories include speaker cables, component interconnects, stones, cones, CD markers, and power cables or conditioners. [cite web | last=Kinch | first=Bruce | url=http://www.enjoythemusic.com/Magazine/equipment/1000/cheaptweaks.htm | title=Cheap Tweaks That Sound Like A MILLION BUCKS!!! | year=2000 | publisher= Enjoy The Music | accessdate=2007-11-07 ] Manufacturers of these products often make strong claims of actual improvement in sound but do not offer any measurements or testable claims. This absence of measurable (rather than subjective) improvement, coupled with sometimes high prices, raises questions about the truthfulness of the marketing.cite web | last=Russell | first=Roger | url=http://www.roger-russell.com/wire/wire.htm | title=Speaker Wire - A History | year=1999-2007 | publisher=
Roger Russell | accessdate=2007-11-07]It is possible to spend over one hundred thousand dollars for a pair of loudspeakers, tens of thousands of dollars for electronics, and more than seven thousand dollars for cables. [Colloms, Martin. [http://www.stereophile.com/floorloudspeakers/909/index.html Wilson Audio Specialties X-1/Grand SLAMM loudspeaker system] in "
Stereophile ", December, 1994, Accessed 2007-05-11] An example of this type of marketing, and the associated reviews in magazines, is the $1499 power cord, for which the reviewer states that "The choice of power cord one makes to transmit AC over the final feet to a component has the potential to be the most influential sonic link in a music system's power chain." [cite web | last=Samuelsen | first=Grant | url=http://www.soundstage.com/revequip/jpslabs_kaptovator.htm | title=JPS Labs Kaptovator Power Cord | year=2000 | publisher=Soundstage Magazine | accessdate=2008-04-07 The author later became the marketing director for a low volume, high priced audio electronics company.]Roger Russell – a former engineer and speaker designer for
McIntosh Labs – describes the introduction of expensive speaker wire brands, and critiques their performance in his online essay called "Speaker Wire - A History."See also
*
Sara K. (the so-called "Queen of the Audiophile")
*Videophile References
External links
* [http://www.stereophile.com/ "Stereophile Online"] - US based publication concentrating on two and multi-channel audio reproduction.
* [http://www.high-endaudio.com/magaz.html "The Audio Press"] - Criticism of industry, magazines, and reviewers.
* [http://www.dself.dsl.pipex.com/ampins/pseudo/subjectv.htm Science and Subjectivism in Audio] Technically-detailed article by Douglas Self.
Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.