stereogeek
Member
- Joined
- Mar 15, 2018
- Messages
- 472
- Thread Author
- #1
Way back in the late '70's or early '80's I had a Kenwood KD 500 turntable and I was looking to replace it as it was acting up. I went to a shop and the sales guy was showing me a Linn table. He asked me to bring in the Kenwood so we could compare the two. I brought the Kenwood in and we went back and forth with both tables and for the life of me I couldn't figure out if the Linn was better. I thought the highs on the Kenwood was a bit better, the mids on the Linn a bit better and the bass was a wash. The salesman told me "you are not listening correctly." I was a bit offended and bit confused by his comment. He said, "If you are trying to break down the highs, mids and lows and compare equipment, you are going to drive yourself crazy." Well, how else am I supposed to do it, I asked? He said, " Just listen to the song, the emotions of the song and if it's musical." After that, it took me 30 seconds to figure out the Linn was the better sounding table. That was one of the biggest hifi learning experiences I have ever had. Not too many months ago I was possibly going to replace my long standing preamp with a new one. After I listened to my old one I put the new one in the system and went downstairs and had lunch to let it warm up. When I listened to the new one it took all of 15 seconds to determine it was way better. I never put the old one back in the system, no back and forth and no regrets. BTW, I had 30 days to return it but it didn't matter. Hope this helps someone.