How did we get into this crazy hobby?


In reading another thread, a person noted that many of us became interested in the hobby at about the same time. I think it would be interesting as to what got us interested and how it started. Perhaps manufacturers may ultimately want to take note.

For me, it started in elementary school when my parents allowed my sister and I to each choose a new record (album). Which I think I wore out in less than a year. I found listening to the radio was unsatisfying as I had to listen to music I was not interested in. It went from this to tyring to record off of the radio (yes, with mirophones) onto either 8-tracks or cassettes (to give you a timeline, this was the mid/late 70s).

In junior highschool I got a paper route and made $23 per week. Just enough to buy 3 new albums per week. I went to my local record store, Beggars Tune where I would choose 2 new albums, Rocky (she worked there) would be given the responsibility to choose my 3rd album of the week. She turned me on to some very good stuff, jazz, rock, classical, Grateful Dead and much more.

In highschool (9th grade), the silver pre 1964 quarters that my grandparents had given me every year since I was young shot up in value thanks to the Hunt brothers in Texas. When my parents were out of town, I took my quarters to the local coin store and sold them at 20 X face value ($5 per quarter). I got about $1,500 for this and took the bus to Sound World and bought my first real stereo system (AAL speakers, Teac Cassette deck [with auto reverse V-9 I think], Luxman integrated amp and BIC turntable.

Two years later and up to a couple hundred records I convinced my parents to get me a Thorens table for Christmas, best Christmas present I ever received. Just got rid of that table last week!!!!

Many years later and like many of us, I could probably benefit from some sort of 12 step group program and be cured once and for all.
ckoffend
Simply put MUSIC MUSIC MUSIC!! After that it is like any other passion, be it racing, you want the best car you can afford and tweek it as budget allows. With audio it just seems that we are forever chasing that dream of system that sounds as good if not better than the best we have heard. Once you hear an AC Cobra 427 rumble, a Honda won't do. Once you hear a set of Avante Garde Trios driven by Viva tube amps with a Gran Prix TT and a Lyra Titan cart. You want your system to sound like that or whatever the system is that made an impression on you. I am sure many will have better examples for the illustration I am attempting here. Bottom line I want to hear the music in it finest reproductive splendor. Well gotta go my LP is on it's last track and it's time to choose another....maybe Allison Krause Live...nope Natilie Merchant Tiger Lily!
Well..for me it all stared when I was a child and seemed to always be surrounded by music that my Mother would play over the music system in our living room. I used to love to get a brand new pencil and sit in my favorite chair listening to Beethoven's 7th Symphony and pretending i was conducting. Late on...I would constantly borrow my sisters portable record player with detachable speakers..I think it was a Panasonic...Much to her displeasure!

When I was in High School my parents had some farm land that had a nice house that was completely cleaned-out by robbers.. I convinced my Dad to take some of the insurance money and let me get a real component music system. At the time my Uncle had a small retail home audio store and he sold to us at cost a pair or Acoustic Research AR-12 speakers, a Technics 25 watt receiver, Pioneer Pl 530 turntable/ with a Shure M97ED cartridge, and a Pioneer CTF 2121 cassette deck.
Boy!...was I in heaven....

That was my first system...and years later and several thousands of dollars poorer, I think I've gotten to the point that I enjoy the music so much more and try not to obsess about the equipment as much. Perhaps there is wisdom to be found in old age, after all.

Yeah right!...good luck with that!You obsessive-compulsive die-hard audiophile!
started reading billboard and cashbox as a grade schooler...started working in a record store at about the same time(circa 1966)....stocking the pop cooler, and checking in records that arrived via greyhound bus.....we had a wall with the top 100 singles that was reshuffled each week. bubbling under the top 100 as well. older hipsters drank lots of chocola, while arguing about the latest lps and politics......looking back i was extremely lucky.....