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445 Critiques   •  English   •   Leisure Interest (Hi-Fi)
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We’re in 2025, now. We didn’t get replicants or flying cars, but a quarter of a century into the millennium, we need to stop thinking like we are still living in the last one.

What’s great about right now in the audio world is we are living in an ‘it’s all good’ time. It doesn’t matter whether you want to listen to music on LP, tape, CD, SACD, streamed, downloaded, on compact cassette, MiniDisc (yes, there are still collectors) or sent by semaphore. Nobody really cares whether you listen using tubes, solid-state, IC-based, in Class A, AB, D, or F#. If you want to play music on headphones, boxes, panels, horns or by someone tapping out a rhythm on your eyeballs... there has never been such diversity of music acquisition and enjoyment.

But we fight 20th-century battles about audio. You must use a particular format or the right kind of amplifier design. I’ve even heard a heated discussion about tape formulations, comparing two brands of open-reel 1/4” tape that were discontinued 40 years ago.

A large part of fighting the battles from the last century often revolves around arguments about ‘pricing audio out of its own market.’ While the ever-increasing prices are disenfranchising existing customers, many of those customers were already ex-customers. Maybe they got bored with audio, perhaps they settled on a system that delivers all they need and only come back when bits fall off that system. And some are no longer with us. So, it’s unclear whether audio priced itself out of its existing customer base, or its existing customer base just stopped buying and the audio industry went ever higher in search of a market. The truth probably lies somewhere between the two.
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hi-fi+ Global Network

hi-fi+ Issue 239 We’re in 2025, now. We didn’t get replicants or flying cars, but a quarter of a century into the millennium, we need to stop thinking like we are still living in the last one. What’s great about right now in the audio world is we are living in an ‘it’s all good’ time. It doesn’t matter whether you want to listen to music on LP, tape, CD, SACD, streamed, downloaded, on compact cassette, MiniDisc (yes, there are still collectors) or sent by semaphore. Nobody really cares whether you listen using tubes, solid-state, IC-based, in Class A, AB, D, or F#. If you want to play music on headphones, boxes, panels, horns or by someone tapping out a rhythm on your eyeballs... there has never been such diversity of music acquisition and enjoyment. But we fight 20th-century battles about audio. You must use a particular format or the right kind of amplifier design. I’ve even heard a heated discussion about tape formulations, comparing two brands of open-reel 1/4” tape that were discontinued 40 years ago. A large part of fighting the battles from the last century often revolves around arguments about ‘pricing audio out of its own market.’ While the ever-increasing prices are disenfranchising existing customers, many of those customers were already ex-customers. Maybe they got bored with audio, perhaps they settled on a system that delivers all they need and only come back when bits fall off that system. And some are no longer with us. So, it’s unclear whether audio priced itself out of its existing customer base, or its existing customer base just stopped buying and the audio industry went ever higher in search of a market. The truth probably lies somewhere between the two.


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hi-fi+ Global Network issue hi-fi+ Issue 239

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We’re in 2025, now. We didn’t get replicants or flying cars, but a quarter of a century into the millennium, we need to stop thinking like we are still living in the last one.

What’s great about right now in the audio world is we are living in an ‘it’s all good’ time. It doesn’t matter whether you want to listen to music on LP, tape, CD, SACD, streamed, downloaded, on compact cassette, MiniDisc (yes, there are still collectors) or sent by semaphore. Nobody really cares whether you listen using tubes, solid-state, IC-based, in Class A, AB, D, or F#. If you want to play music on headphones, boxes, panels, horns or by someone tapping out a rhythm on your eyeballs... there has never been such diversity of music acquisition and enjoyment.

But we fight 20th-century battles about audio. You must use a particular format or the right kind of amplifier design. I’ve even heard a heated discussion about tape formulations, comparing two brands of open-reel 1/4” tape that were discontinued 40 years ago.

A large part of fighting the battles from the last century often revolves around arguments about ‘pricing audio out of its own market.’ While the ever-increasing prices are disenfranchising existing customers, many of those customers were already ex-customers. Maybe they got bored with audio, perhaps they settled on a system that delivers all they need and only come back when bits fall off that system. And some are no longer with us. So, it’s unclear whether audio priced itself out of its existing customer base, or its existing customer base just stopped buying and the audio industry went ever higher in search of a market. The truth probably lies somewhere between the two.
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hi-fi+ is Europe’s premier English-language high-end audio magazine. Whether it’s the latest in digital audio technology or the best turntable you’ve ever heard, hi-fi+ magazine is the ultimate audiophile authority.

Our goal is clear; to seek out the finest audio components money can buy. Music is the soundtrack to all our lives and we think that the better that soundtrack, sounds the more enriched our lives can be. A good audio system can open up new avenues of music that might surprise you. We don’t differentiate; it could be a classic valve amplifier or a state-of-the-art music server – if it sounds good, we want to know and we want to tell you about it. The difference between good sound and great sound lies in the details… and we are obsessive about detail.

We aren’t constrained by measurement or bogged down in stuffy old paradigms. We are relevant and a little bit irreverent. Hi-Fi+ features some of the best writers in the business, all passionate about making music sound as good as it possibly can. We seek out the finest audio components – and the latest and greatest music – and aren’t afraid of finding the best, whatever the cost.

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hi-fi+ Global Network

Hi Fi + has a much more friendly user interface than The Absolute Sound, which is a pain to read online. Révision 01 avril 2025

Really interesting

Very good magazine for all those fans of hi-fi information and news Révision 09 avril 2022

Hi-Fi+

Well, over the (many) years as an Audiophile, I have read (many) Audiophile magazines...My first impressions of Hi-Fi+ came from reading a printed issue (unfortunately, landed to someone who should have sent it back to me but didn't), but that issue whetted my appetite, so I paid for the digital edition. Great reviews, of important products, well-written....very satisfied. Will re-activate my subscription when it expires (in two month's time). Thanks a lot! Révision 17 janvier 2021

Hi-Fi+

Excellent magazine, well written articles, technically accurate, informative and entertaining. Révision 17 janvier 2021

Hi-Fi+

Love the magazine for its well written reviews of equipment and music. Révision 28 septembre 2020

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