What does Everybody do?

Postman from the UK.
Music is my main hobby. I like a wide range of genres.
My current hifi system is the best I've had (currently waiting delivery of the Music First Audio Baby Reference V2 preamp) which I ordered a couple of months ago.
I drive a Nissan 370Z which I enjoy driving round race tracks, which I will be doing in August.
I also like driving supercars round race tracks.
Last year I drove the latest Maclaren, Lamborghini and Ferrari round Thruxton race track.
I also drove a Ferrari round Silverstone race track.
 
Totally with you on the driving part. Drove Daytona in A Nascar biggest blast I've ever done. Driving the the brickyard is on my bucket list.

Postman from the UK.
Music is my main hobby. I like a wide range of genres.
My current hifi system is the best I've had (currently waiting delivery of the Music First Audio Reference V2) which I ordered a couple of months ago.
I drive a Nissan 370Z which I enjoy driving round race tracks, which I will be doing in August.
I also like driving supercars round race tracks.
Last year I drove the latest Maclaren, Lamborghini and Ferrari round Thruxton race track.
I also drove a Ferrari round Silverstone race track.
 
I work at a financial advisor firm in Dallas. In addition to audio/music, I enjoy traveling, Cardinals baseball (bucket list item to visit all 30 stadiums with my wife - we’ve hit 6 in the two years since we started), good tv/movies (just got into The Wire recently), cars, bourbon, and a tasty burger.

It’s been great getting to know and learn from the fine folks here over the years, and I look forward to many more.
 
Hifi! How are you? Blackraven says hes been on forums for about 10 years....Heck, me (frenchmon) You , Peabody and Blackraven where at AVR longer than that. At least it sure seems like it.

Oh and while im at it...I do IT work.

Dude, how ya been. Yes, it was early 90s when I started in the Cables forum and then switched over to Rave Reviews where we shared so much good music. I still have and spin many of the great comps I received. I just recently spun one Troy sent me, very first package, after I asked "What is Prog?" From that day I got about 300 disks in the mail and sent back out more than that.

Things are good, thanks for saying you were here.
 
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Retirement came my way in early November of 2017. I took a long vacation, worked on my Honey Do list, helped the wife structure her art glass company and put up her website.

Then...I needed something to do so I am now consulting under a retainer agreement to a local legal firm. I also help small businesses purchase or lease their fleets. Of course, the glass business needs attention overy other day or so. I also keep pretty busy moderating on a couple of vehicle based forums.

I think I am busier now than when I retired!
 
Mikaado! brothels!!! ha!!!!!!!!!!!!

i just retired, still quite an adjustment! molecular biology at a great company for 38 years. i miss work, and the people. i was watching "Elementary" on TV and noticed all the McIntosh gear he has, and decided to build a great system. somehow i found this forum.

i ended up asking a LOT of DUMB questions of Mike, who was always very nice. then i found out he ran this forum. i got to meet Mike last fall for a great dinner. from him i got my GREAT Triode corporation tube integrated amp and ASTOUNDING Harbeth speakers. also two REL subs. this is a GREAT forum, run by a GREAT guy and very intelligent and helpful members. highlights include Mike himself, shark mouth, jade david and especially JDandy. many thanks guys!! best regards, Bob:hey:
I'm quoting this because it's a really neat post that we all need to read every-now & then. So special as it takes us all! back to when we first wondered & then discovered another way of listening. Thank-you Bob for doing my faith proud!!!
 
I tried retirement in 2007 for 4 months, drove myself crazy, my wife even crazier and my 3 dogs even crazier. They all kicked me out of the house and told me to go back to work. Retirement was the toughest job I ever had.

I may try retirement again in a couple of years as I just turned 65 and just had twin (boy and girl) grandchildren. However, my wife wants to be near the grandkids in NYC. There lies the rub! I clawed my way out of that place in 87 having grown up there, gone to med school and did my residency there and couldn't wait to get out. I break out in cold sweats every time the plane approaches LaGuardia or JFK. The only thing worse than flying into NY is trying to get out.
Maybe, but, it is a retirement of passage as we grow older that very few of us could afford/successful/deserving/ etc... to settle there. Most of us/ audiophiles or just weird guys that buy stereo stuff!!???? as in everyday aren't lucky enough to have the choice because we chose the gear
 
I already wrote in this thread a few days ago. I forgot to comment that one of my hobbies, is to visit toy stores. In fact a few days ago I was in one and I send you a photograph that proves it .......
 
Very interesting the wide range of occupations. I've been retired for a decade. For the first thirty years of my career I was a theoretical astrophysicist and professor of astronomy. Then I made a big change and for the last 10 years I started a non-profit operating (non-endowed) educational foundation and served as its CEO, growing from one person to a staff of 135. Much of my retirement (six years) was spent in digitizing about 2/3's of my 15,000 record and 1000 tape collection - a total of about 40TB, all at 192/24. It is essentially all classical. I also wrote a book on Decca Records (Decca: Supreme Stereophonic Legacy) interviewing several of the old Decca staff in London, including several of the original recording engineers. It includes four CD's that the late Winston Ma of Fist Impression Music produced and published from great Decca recordings, remastered by Michael Bishop and Robert Friedrich, multi-Grammy award winner. It was quite well received selling out its first printing in less than two months.

We are very involved in music, especially attending classical music concerts, about 70 a year. My wife and I both play the piano and we have two grands in our home, and I also dabble on the viola.

Larry
 
Hey Larry, interesting career. Sounds like you had some fulfilling life work.
On another note, could I ask why you digitized all the Vinyl and tape. Seems everyone scoffs at digital.
 
I'm 74, retired from the commercial photography business in 2003 after a 40+ year career that started in high school. In the late 60's and early 70's I did mainly large format studio work for the food and wine industries in San Francisco. Sold my SF studio in '76 to finance a 2 year sailing odyssey to the South Pacific with my wife (now of 52 years) on our 40' ketch. Upon our return in 1980 settled in the wine country and started a family (2 daughters now in their 30's, 2 grandsons) but eventually went back to SF and re-engaged in food & wine photography. Later ran 3 photo labs/studio and did aerial photography. Retired for the 3rd time in 2003 and moved to our 45 acre ranch in the boonies near the Sonoma Coast where I manage a forest of 35,000 Redwood and Douglas Fir trees which I planted in 1993 following a wild fire that destroyed the old forest. These trees are now 50-60' tall. We (I have 3 workers) thin and groom, and remove the "ladder" fuels, creating what are called "Shaded Fuel Breaks" so as to inprove the survival odds in the next fire. In another 10 years, we will be able to start a sustainable annual timber harvest. I bike, hike and am a daily lap swimmer. San Francisco is once again my primary residence which allows me to enjoy city life and frequently attend performances at the SF Jazz Center, the SF Opera and Symphony, while my wife remains mostly at the ranch where we have a large garden, orchard, chickens and sheep. I am currently overseeing a major remodel of the SF property, which dates back to 1910. Bicycling is my primary form of city transport.

My audio history started in my early teens with a Kenwood receiver, a Thorens TD124 tt (should never have sold it!) and a pair of AKG headphones. Speakers came later. It has progressed ever since to better and better gear. My love of planar speakers led me to Sound Lab electrostatics about 15 years ago, becoming a home based dealer, mainly to support this expensive hobby. I have 2 very fine but different systems, one in the country and another in SF. Music is my passion; I have a huge library that spans many genres, Classical, Opera, Jazz, and a lot more, including Bluegrass, Country (think Willie, Lucinda Williams) and Blues- 4,000 lp's and a large digital library. I now primarily stream Tidal via my 2 Lumins. Roon will be added soon.
 
Hey Larry, interesting career. Sounds like you had some fulfilling life work.
On another note, could I ask why you digitized all the Vinyl and tape. Seems everyone scoffs at digital.

I really am an analogue person. Vinyl, but even more so R2R (15ips, 2 track). However, after I retired, my wife asked a simple question. She was looking at my 15K records and 1000+ tapes and asked "What are you going to do with all these records and tapes - our daughter and son-in-law won't take them." They both love classical music and are fine amateur musicians. So I started thinking about the collection as a legacy. I went to the first Computer Audiophile symposium in 2009, looking for possible digital solutions, having heard about Amarra and their soon to be released digital recording system. There I met Tim Marutani, consultant extraordinaire (and his friend and audio dealer Maier Shadi (of Audio Salon in Santa Monica), and Mr. CA himself Chris Connaker. With Tim, I was introduced into the high end of pro audio, including several superstars. Tim helped me search for the best solution to my problem and after several months of research arranged a shootout at my home, conducted by mastering engineer Paul Stubblebine, with several different A to D convertors and different software packages.

I realized that with the goal of digitizing 10,000 records and tapes, it would take, in real time, over 5 years (actually took 6 years), so my time was the most expensive commodity. With my wife's support, I decided that getting the best equipment to do the digitizing was important, since I didn't want to do the ripping more than once per record or tape.

I ended up choosing the Pacific Microsonics Model Two (which can digitize at 192/24) using Merging Technologies Pyramix software and their Mykerinos card. I had a custom designed phono preamp with adjustable EQ curves for my old and new vinyl and a balanced output to the Model Two built by Dan Schmalle of Bottlehead. The PM Model Two was the most difficult to get. There were only 150 or so ever built and almost all of them are locked up in recording and mastering studios. Tim started his hunt, and after about four months, I had my Model Two, found by Maier Shadi at Warner Bros studios, where it and another (now owned by Maier) were used in mastering sound tracks for films. And I was off.

My collection includes about 3000 British Decca classical recordings, 95% are original pressings and labels, and include just about all of the Decca stereo classical records released in the analogue era, and about 3000 British EMI recordings, almost all original pressings and labels, including about 90% of all the EMI analogue stereo recordings. I also have fairly complete collections of the great RCA and Mercury recordings, and several other labels. I also have a complete collection of all records (600 of them) that ever appeared on HP's TAS Super Disc List, while Harry Pearson was still alive. Those are the heart of the 10,000 records and tapes that I have digitized.

Of course most of the records I bought used, mostly from British dealers during almost annual visits to the UK for the past 20 years. So there were issues with clicks and pops and occasional surface noise. Through Tim Marutani, I met and hired recording engineer Mark Willsher to teach me how to use all of this equipment and he introduced me to Izotope RX which I used, in various forms, to remove clicks and pops without affecting the sound quality and even reduce surface noise when needed with minimal effect.

So now I have a legacy for my daughter and son-in-law and our two grandchildren, who were born during this odyssey. Chris Connaker has built two computers for me, the first for recording all the files, and the second, just last year to play back all the files using Roon and HQP (and powerful enough to playback mch files in DSD, upconverting them to DSD256.) The latter was designed by Chris who consulted with Jussi of HQP in making sure that everything would work.

I still play analogue mostly, a lot from my over 500 15ips 2 track tapes. But my digital set up allows me to play 5.1 mch digital files, other digital files I have purchased and my 10,000+ digital rips. And my daughter and her family have a good sampling of my rips and many of my duplicate records for their analogue set up.

Larry
 
I really am an analogue person. Vinyl, but even more so R2R (15ips, 2 track). However, after I retired, my wife asked a simple question. She was looking at my 15K records and 1000+ tapes and asked "What are you going to do with all these records and tapes - our daughter and son-in-law won't take them." They both love classical music and are fine amateur musicians. So I started thinking about the collection as a legacy. I went to the first Computer Audiophile symposium in 2009, looking for possible digital solutions, having heard about Amarra and their soon to be released digital recording system. There I met Tim Marutani, consultant extraordinaire (and his friend and audio dealer Maier Shadi (of Audio Salon in Santa Monica), and Mr. CA himself Chris Connaker. With Tim, I was introduced into the high end of pro audio, including several superstars. Tim helped me search for the best solution to my problem and after several months of research arranged a shootout at my home, conducted by mastering engineer Paul Stubblebine, with several different A to D convertors and different software packages.

I realized that with the goal of digitizing 10,000 records and tapes, it would take, in real time, over 5 years (actually took 6 years), so my time was the most expensive commodity. With my wife's support, I decided that getting the best equipment to do the digitizing was important, since I didn't want to do the ripping more than once per record or tape.

I ended up choosing the Pacific Microsonics Model Two (which can digitize at 192/24) using Merging Technologies Pyramix software and their Mykerinos card. I had a custom designed phono preamp with adjustable EQ curves for my old and new vinyl and a balanced output to the Model Two built by Dan Schmalle of Bottlehead. The PM Model Two was the most difficult to get. There were only 150 or so ever built and almost all of them are locked up in recording and mastering studios. Tim started his hunt, and after about four months, I had my Model Two, found by Maier Shadi at Warner Bros studios, where it and another (now owned by Maier) were used in mastering sound tracks for films. And I was off.

My collection includes about 3000 British Decca classical recordings, 95% are original pressings and labels, and include just about all of the Decca stereo classical records released in the analogue era, and about 3000 British EMI recordings, almost all original pressings and labels, including about 90% of all the EMI analogue stereo recordings. I also have fairly complete collections of the great RCA and Mercury recordings, and several other labels. I also have a complete collection of all records (600 of them) that ever appeared on HP's TAS Super Disc List, while Harry Pearson was still alive. Those are the heart of the 10,000 records and tapes that I have digitized.

Of course most of the records I bought used, mostly from British dealers during almost annual visits to the UK for the past 20 years. So there were issues with clicks and pops and occasional surface noise. Through Tim Marutani, I met and hired recording engineer Mark Willsher to teach me how to use all of this equipment and he introduced me to Izotope RX which I used, in various forms, to remove clicks and pops without affecting the sound quality and even reduce surface noise when needed with minimal effect.

So now I have a legacy for my daughter and son-in-law and our two grandchildren, who were born during this odyssey. Chris Connaker has built two computers for me, the first for recording all the files, and the second, just last year to play back all the files using Roon and HQP (and powerful enough to playback mch files in DSD, upconverting them to DSD256.) The latter was designed by Chris who consulted with Jussi of HQP in making sure that everything would work.

I still play analogue mostly, a lot from my over 500 15ips 2 track tapes. But my digital set up allows me to play 5.1 mch digital files, other digital files I have purchased and my 10,000+ digital rips. And my daughter and her family have a good sampling of my rips and many of my duplicate records for their analogue set up.

Larry

Larry, Holy Smokes, you are our own HDTracks or similar.


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