Myles B. Astor
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- Joined
- Apr 5, 2013
- Messages
- 2,884
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- #1
Let’s go with the Readers Digest version. I was smitten with the audio affliction thanks to my father who never bought an audio system because none of them sounded like real music to him. But every Sunday like clockwork, we would listen to the live classical music station broadcast from Lincoln Center in NYC.
Fast forward to college where the audio (high-end audio was yet to come) affliction became a chronic disease thanks to one friend who worked in Tech Hi Fi (and used to bring the equipment back to his dorm room to listen to) and another friend who made money on the side selling used audio gear. My main claim to audio fame in college was my nonstop playing of David Bowie, Mott the Hoople and Lou Reed on my little KLH all in one system! (though the first three LPs ever bought in HS were Led Zepellin 2, Jethro Tull Benefit and Black Sabbath Masters of Reality.)
It was all downhill after that. After graduation from College in 1976, found myself one day wandering around Greenwich Village and came across the now long gone (gone the way of most of the audio and record stores sadly in NYC) high-end audio store Audio Exchange. This was my first real introduction to high-end audio. In this store was sound coming out of speakers like I had never heard before. And in retrospect, that was a pretty darn good system though don’t remember the specific gear: Tube electronics were from ARC, turntable was from Linn and speakers were Quads estats. And sitting on the shelf, and soon to accompany me home, was a copy of Issue 18 of the then fledgling magazine, TAS. I must admit my head was swimming with names of audio equipment that had never heard of before.
But it was not really until 1980 that I owned my first –and how glorious it sounded at the time – high end audio system comprised of Dahlquist DQ10s (and had auditioned quite a few speakers and came down to the Dollies and the Vandy 2As), a modded Hafler DH200 amp and 101 and the Rega 3/JVC 7045 arm/Grace F9E cartridge hooked together with the original MC speaker cables and some MF1 Super Litz IC cables.
[A quick reality check is in order here. The Super Litz MF1 cost the then unheard of price of $40/meter. I thought I needed my head examined but I forked over the cash (Yes, they did make a difference!). Not quite sure what that $40 would buy one today?)]
Those ss pieces were soon to be replaced after a friend one day brought over his AA POOGED Dynaco PAS-3 preamplifier replete with its own separate outboard power supply. My immediate reaction after hearing my first piece of tube gear? Where did all that music come from? The very next day, I went down to Stereo Exchange, sold the Hafler/van Alastine 101 and bought a used cj PV5, soon to be joined by a cj MV75A-1. And it's been all downhill ever since.
Fast forward to college where the audio (high-end audio was yet to come) affliction became a chronic disease thanks to one friend who worked in Tech Hi Fi (and used to bring the equipment back to his dorm room to listen to) and another friend who made money on the side selling used audio gear. My main claim to audio fame in college was my nonstop playing of David Bowie, Mott the Hoople and Lou Reed on my little KLH all in one system! (though the first three LPs ever bought in HS were Led Zepellin 2, Jethro Tull Benefit and Black Sabbath Masters of Reality.)
It was all downhill after that. After graduation from College in 1976, found myself one day wandering around Greenwich Village and came across the now long gone (gone the way of most of the audio and record stores sadly in NYC) high-end audio store Audio Exchange. This was my first real introduction to high-end audio. In this store was sound coming out of speakers like I had never heard before. And in retrospect, that was a pretty darn good system though don’t remember the specific gear: Tube electronics were from ARC, turntable was from Linn and speakers were Quads estats. And sitting on the shelf, and soon to accompany me home, was a copy of Issue 18 of the then fledgling magazine, TAS. I must admit my head was swimming with names of audio equipment that had never heard of before.
But it was not really until 1980 that I owned my first –and how glorious it sounded at the time – high end audio system comprised of Dahlquist DQ10s (and had auditioned quite a few speakers and came down to the Dollies and the Vandy 2As), a modded Hafler DH200 amp and 101 and the Rega 3/JVC 7045 arm/Grace F9E cartridge hooked together with the original MC speaker cables and some MF1 Super Litz IC cables.
[A quick reality check is in order here. The Super Litz MF1 cost the then unheard of price of $40/meter. I thought I needed my head examined but I forked over the cash (Yes, they did make a difference!). Not quite sure what that $40 would buy one today?)]
Those ss pieces were soon to be replaced after a friend one day brought over his AA POOGED Dynaco PAS-3 preamplifier replete with its own separate outboard power supply. My immediate reaction after hearing my first piece of tube gear? Where did all that music come from? The very next day, I went down to Stereo Exchange, sold the Hafler/van Alastine 101 and bought a used cj PV5, soon to be joined by a cj MV75A-1. And it's been all downhill ever since.