5:41 PM
Why we need audiophiles.
Gizmodo dropped in on Michael Fremer, noted audiophile and reviewer for Stereophile Magazine, to hear what music sounds like on a $350,000 stereo system — using vinyl as the predominant format. What John Mahoney left with, among other things, was the discovery that his iPod sucked and that the splendor of sound is in the details:
Settled into the lone leather chaise in Fremer’s basement audio temple, nestled right in the sweetspot of his $65,000 Wilson MAXX3 speakers, I hear the needle drop on Air’s “Run” from Talkie Walkie. It’s a song I’ve never heard (kind of fell off Air after overusing Moon Safari considerably), but one that I’m now listening to all the time. Because, with all honesty, I have never heard anything like that song played on that stereo system at that moment. Ever.
We play my solid 256kbps VBR MP3 of “Heroes” off my iPod; it sounds like shit. Free of pops and crackles, yes, but completely lifeless, flat in every way. This is the detail that matters: Audiophiles are basically synesthesiacs. They “see” music in three-dimensional visual space. You close your eyes in Fremer’s chair, and you can perceive a detailed 3D matrix of sound, with each element occupying its own special space in the air. It’s crazy and I’ve never experienced anything like it.
