Responding to
        Criticism 
         A few months ago I wrote an editorial in which I argued that one of the things in the future
        that might hurt high-quality sound is the lack of young people interested in it. I used my
        own experience as evidence. A student of mine had landed an internship designing CD
        players for Panasonic but was not excited about the job. He thought that, while it was
        good experience, it wasnt any different from any other engineering job. I suggested,
        and still think, that this must in part be because of a failure on societys part to
        impart an understanding of the value of music. Second, I suggested that students
        lack of knowledge of musical history and theory has also led to them to not value music
        and, consequently, its reproduction. Third, I argued that the Apple iPod, in all of its
        wonderfulness, has skewed consumer interest toward small, portable sound and away from
        good sound. 
        I received e-mails that criticized each of these points.
        Here, I respond to those criticisms and explain why I stand by my initial position. 
        One person wrote to tell me that my students reaction
        was normal, and that I may have too much invested in wanting others to value good sound
        the way I do. Ill agree that my commitment to good sound may go beyond the norm, but
        I think my point doesnt require sharing that commitment. I think that if a person
        doesnt care whether he is designing CD players or garage-door openers, then he does
        not value music very much. My criticism is more of what society fosters and deems valuable
        than a criticism of this student, who is a smart and thoughtful person. If he does not
        value music, it is because he has not been taught to appreciate it. 
        Some writers took my criticism that university students
        dont understand music theory or history as a conservative attack on the
        students own interest in todays music. They argued that students
        interest in hip-hop is the same as previous generations interest in rock. New
        generations, I was told, are always described by older generations as having lost their
        heads when it comes to music. 
        This troubled me, not least because Im pretty sure
        Im closer in age to the students than to those who lobbed this criticism. It also
        suggests that I did not clearly make my point in the first place. I dont find my
        students interest in hip-hop the problem, but that they seem incapable of even
        understanding the music that interests them. They cannot place it in its cultural context,
        or even understand that the samples on which hip-hop relies come from earlier music. As a
        teenager, I first heard John Coltranes "Ascension" as a sample on a Public
        Enemy record. It led me to investigate this music and to increase my understanding of it,
        and also to understand why Public Enemy may have wanted to use it. What interested me was
        not just the sound, but the intentions behind it. Without understanding the meaning of
        music, in whatever form, it begins to be valued more as a way of ridding ourselves of
        silence than as a way to experience beauty and meaning. 
        It was pointed out to me that the Apple iPod itself
        isnt the problem, because it is not limited to playing lossy MP3 files but can also
        be used to play high-quality digital copies. This is true, of course, but thats not
        how digital music players are marketed, or, as far as I can tell, how they are used by the
        vast majority of those who own them. The ads for the iPod stress how many thousands
        of songs it can hold, not how good those songs will sound; the goal is not quality
        but quantity. The iPod makes a music library into a fashion statement, not a meaningful
        collection of art. It might be that a music collection stored on an iPod can be treated as
        both and that these things can coexist, but my outlook is pessimistic. 
        In "As We See It" in the February 2005 issue of Stereophile,
        John Marks raised issues connected to those Ive raised here. Johns essay is
        more eloquent than mine, but I think both pieces indicate that there is a real devaluation
        of music as serious art in contemporary society. Audiophiles failure to help turn
        the tide may ultimately hurt themselves. In some ways this issue reminds me of the
        characters in G.K. Chestertons The Ball and the Cross. Chesterton is best
        known for his Father Brown mysteries, but he was much more than a mystery writer. Toward
        the end of this fantasy novel, a theist and an atheist who have been feuding and fencing
        their way around London realize that their true enemies are not each other, but those who
        do not take seriously the question of Gods existence. If Gods existence
        is not taken seriously, then reasoned belief, whether theist or atheist, suffers. The
        amount of energy that goes into the haranguing that populates audio websites about the
        superiority of SACD over DVD-Audio or vice versa, or tubes vs. solid-state, or how crooked
        some audio reviewers may be, would be better spent encouraging others to see the value of
        good sound and good music. 
        A note on this months review 
        We begin this month with a review of Magnepans
        MG1.6/QR. At $1725/pair USD, this loudspeaker may be the most expensive item well
        ever review on GoodSound!, where we strive to cover products that are both
        affordable and provide high performance. While the MG1.6/QR might be reaching the limits
        of the definition of affordable, we believe its quality of performance is so high
        that some readers might be willing to stretch their budget to buy a pair. Great speakers
        can be had for much less, but sometimes we can gain much by stretching ourselves just a
        little. 
        
Eric D. Hetherington 
         
        
        
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