If you’re an A/V integrator, I’m probably your worst nightmare. I’ll tell you I rarely listen to music, so just put in some cheap speakers so I can listen to NPR in any room of the house.
UK distributor Custom AV Distribution Limited (CAVD) knows my type. In a blog, technical manager Wayne Hyde writes:
If an AV installer tries to sell “better sound” it can easily lead to a blunt reply along the lines of, “I don’t need to hear every detail. I won’t be sitting down to listen in a critical way.”
Maybe they want a good audio set-up for surround sound, but when it comes to the whole house, “Joe Public [just] wants background multiroom music,” Hyde says.
The response, he says, isn’t try to convince Mr. and Ms. Public that music sounds so much better when you can hear every instrument and every nuance.
Instead, frame the conversation in more practical terms. When you’re getting ready in the morning, you don’t want to strain to hear the news. While cleaning the home, you want to hear an audio book clearly while rambling around.
Importantly, he says, a good-quality multiroom audio system “means hearing more at a lower volume, which is crucial for many properties to help avoid noise pollution.”
And then there’s this: “When it sounds good, you listen for longer, to whole albums, not just the hits.”
That would be the answer to my own objections because it might be that I “never listen to music” because it never sounds good.
(Or, perhaps, I just like it quiet, like Hyde’s father-in-law, who allegedly says, “The best music is silence.”)
Hyde says good sound quality matters to everyone, not just audiophiles: “A great sounding home is a happier home.”
In the kitchen, it makes cooking and cleaning “more fun.” At BBQ time, it “helps keep the party going.” And at bath-time, good sound is much more soothing than crackly background music.
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