First thing to decide on is what kind of sound I enjoy and want and then I pick the gear to deliver it.
This should start with the music I enjoy. A system delivering the best boom for house music or earth shattering rock is likely to differ from a system I would use to determine whether Diana Krall plays Bösendorfer or Steinway, the brand strings the Acoustic Alchemy are using or what kind of violin Haifetz is playing on a certain recording.
Starting with speakers, whether stiff cone materials (beryllium, aluminum), controlled cabinet (like Magico, Raidho) or smoother cone materials (paper woofers, silk dome tweeters or horns), sounding cabinet (like Devore Orangutan 0/96, Harbeth). Speaker choice will also depend on room properties, whether I can eliminate room interference or if I do have to integrate it. That choice will determine what kind of amplification and cabling I need.
Depending on speaker choice I will then know whether a transistor amp will need to brute-force a bitch of a load to behave or whether there is freedom for some tubes to do their filigrane magic. Sources you can play equally well with both approaches.
While I would not use cables to alter the sound, they will deliver the final spices to make the mix to make it perfect. Surprisingly, for me power nowadays being the most important, as they will influence the entire system, LS' coming second and ICs third.
Sources I would also pick to fit music choices, whether a tubed source for small ensemble jazz, direct drive 'table for large orchestras or DSD for a broader classic bouquet, or just good PRAT with an ever evolving FPGA DAC.
So, luckily there never is one way to do it right, a simple correct answer or a true final solution - that's why this is so much fun (and the bill ever so high).
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