Do You Care About AESTHETICS? What Are Your Gear/Listening Room Preferences?...


Just wondering about how much people care about the aesthetics related to this hobby.

To what degree do you care, or not, about a speaker looks, an amp, etc? Is it only about the sound, or do you appreciate or require your gear to be attractive to your eye as well?

And more generally, how much do you care about the aesthetics of your listening space?

My answer to both is: I care quite a bit about the look both of my gear and my listening room.

I’ll elaborate on my preferences first.

I just love a beautiful looking piece of gear, especially speakers. I generally prefer a wood finish, and for instance some of the Tidal speaker finishes are drool-worthy to me - any speaker that has a gorgeous rich wood grain with an impeccable finish will stop me in my tracks, especially if it features a graceful or cool design. (I hate a wood finish that has blah color/grain//execution) . I’m also open to other non-wood-finish designs. I spend a fair amount of time on pinterest just looking at beautiful audio gear.  Though for me my current Thiel 2.7 speakers, in one of my favorite wood finishes - ebony - are almost ideal. Sleek, contemporary, beautiful without being garish and...very important....SPEAKER GRILLS!

This is where I depart from many of my audiophile brethren who seem to want to see every bit of technology they paid for, including all the drivers. Although some drivers can be beautiful...most are not (IMO) and so often the screws around the drivers strike me as "industrial" with an unfinished look. The kind of thing you’d never get away with in most other high quality products.

I also don’t like staring at speaker drivers because, for me, it impedes the illusion of soundstaging/imaging/speakers disappearing. If I am seeing the woofer and tweeter right in front of me while the music is playing, I can’t help but perceive them as part of the experience, so I’m conscious of the midrange coming from THAT driver and the highs coming from THOSE tweeters right there! Once the drivers are covered in a nice grill, I don’t perceive the music as coming out of the speakers (if they "disappear" well to begin with).

That general aesthetic carries to the rest of the gear and room. I certainly love some audio jewlery and I’m a tube fan. But ultimately I much prefer a clean, uncluttered visual environment for listening to music (and watching movies). So my amplification/source gear for both my 2 channel and home theater surround speakers is in a separate room down the hall a bit. (If I had to have them in my room, I’d still want to orient them out of my sight when listening to music).

So essentially all I have on view in my listening room is my stereo speakers, and some discretely hidden home theater surround speakers.

Having the preferences I do, I can often find myself somewhat aghast at set ups in which the owner clearly doesn’t care about aesthetics at all "who cares how anything looks? It’s all about the sound!" This can go from set ups (that I’ve also visited) that are the audiophile version of a frat boy’s first apartment, where you think "Ok, I know why you live alone." Wires strung everywhere, speaker grills lying around the floor, just...tons of crap everywhere. I just couldn’t relax in that type of environment.

Then there’s the more studious version, in which the owner clearly cares about aesthetics....they just have a different sense than I do. For instance, those set ups that featuring speakers with a billion exposed drivers, with giant subwoofers (woofers exposed of course) beside each speaker, every bit of amp/source equipment around the speakers, cables prominently displayed...all that stuff to me is the equivalent of being overwhelmed by the technology to a practically intimidating degree.

I like the technology, and I am definitely willing to pay more when I can for a more beautiful, higher class looking product. Speakers especially because they are unavoidable pieces of permanent furnitur, and they can be beautifully crafted. I also love any other gear that’s beautiful and I can always get the aesthetic pleasure of their being in my rack. But I prefer all that to take the back seat to my concentrating on music, hence the clean look for my room. (Which is actually a huge challenge for me to pull off, since I’ve had to integrate both my 2 channel system and home theater system in the same room).

So with my own likes and dislikes laid bare, I’d love to hear others chime in on the same subjects.

Cheers,

Prof






prof
Looks like a prop from A Clockwork Orange.
Other than that, I hope no women here are offended.
I am in the 'if it works for me' rather than what it looks like to anyone else. (though I am not 'messy' as in Frat look.)
My giant Magnepan speakers are near the window but off to the sides, (45" out from the back wall) with tweets 'in' and the speakers father apart. So the view out the window is wide open.
My main claim to personally ignoring looks is having my main audio rack directly to my left (basically with my listening chair in the middle of the living room. No compromise with aesthetics there!
Partly so it is easy to get behind, and partly to avoid any remote.. particularly the volume remote. which never gets it exact anyway.

Then all the media. Every little hall has one wall with racks for CDs.
Then the bedroom, where two walls are filled with LPs. Like the entire wall. LOL
My big DVD collection is serving double duty behind and to both the back sides of my Magnepan 3.6 as storage and corner acoustical dampening. (along with the huge but always drawn back heavy drapes)

Even though I live in an apartment (by choice) I do stay a long time. Last apartment was 17 years. This one I am at 11 years and no plans to ever leave. (both had the kitchen open and behind the living room.. thus more acoustic space)

I would think part of the aesthetic thing is how much money and house one has.. A dedicated room vs the only room you got.
And the shape of the room.
(I passed on an apartment which had a square living room, no way!)

As far as individual component looks. The boxes all are pretty close to the same. Sometimes one sees pyramid shaped amps, and strange speakers.. My Kuzma TT the Stogi/Stabi S is a nice bit of art as well as function.
In my case, aesthetics played a primary role in the setup of my gear, and I tweaked placement from there. Even though I have a "dedicated listening room", it opens up to a "dedicated dining area" at the back, and the front has "dedicated double hung windows". :)
As for the electronics, I listen in the dark most of the time. I like a good looking tt and I have the hanss t-60 with vpi 3D tonearm. Speakers, I use Ushers that are made out of real wood and bent with a large press to get the year rounded back. Finishnis cabinet quality. The room, nothing in it but the necessary room treatments, 1 chair, and 2 large lp storage cabinets in the back.
I believe eligibility for this question can be significantly narrowed by two qualifying ones, "are you single" and if not, "do you have a separate audio cave." If the answer to either is negative it’s usually a nonstarter. (I am no to both. :) )