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Car Audio Discussion
General Car Audio
Will the hobby of car audio ever die?
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<blockquote data-quote="bbeljefe" data-source="post: 8235280" data-attributes="member: 655960"><p>Why do I need to listen to music the way the artist intended? I like hella bass. Frank Zappa may not. Does that mean I'm doing something wrong when I turn up the bass to his music? Have I violated some unspoken rule? And if I have, how am I supposed to know what the artist intended?</p><p></p><p>And why do you care if other people don't appreciate quality sound? That's like worrying that some people don't like chocolate. If you like chocolate and I don't, that should have no affect on how much you enjoy it... and it doesn't make me any less "refined" an individual. It's just a subjective preference and different preferences are the fuel that drives innovation and gives the consumer myriad choices whether it's in clothing, furniture or car audio equipment.</p><p></p><p>I have customers every day who set their systems with far too much treble for my taste but they leave my shop giddy and grinning because I made their system capable of sounding like they want it to. Am I being a poor businessman by not telling them I think they use too much treble or am I supplying a demanded service that satisfies the consumer?</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="bbeljefe, post: 8235280, member: 655960"] Why do I need to listen to music the way the artist intended? I like hella bass. Frank Zappa may not. Does that mean I'm doing something wrong when I turn up the bass to his music? Have I violated some unspoken rule? And if I have, how am I supposed to know what the artist intended? And why do you care if other people don't appreciate quality sound? That's like worrying that some people don't like chocolate. If you like chocolate and I don't, that should have no affect on how much you enjoy it... and it doesn't make me any less "refined" an individual. It's just a subjective preference and different preferences are the fuel that drives innovation and gives the consumer myriad choices whether it's in clothing, furniture or car audio equipment. I have customers every day who set their systems with far too much treble for my taste but they leave my shop giddy and grinning because I made their system capable of sounding like they want it to. Am I being a poor businessman by not telling them I think they use too much treble or am I supplying a demanded service that satisfies the consumer? [/QUOTE]
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Will the hobby of car audio ever die?
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