It has been a long time since I went to a trade show or convention. My 24 year attendance streak at the CES show ultimately came to an end because, well, The Consumer Electronics Show has nothing to do with high-end audio anymore after more than a generation of being the Belle of the Ball global technology event. The Munich Show has taken over as the biggest, global audiophile show and perhaps AXPONA in an often icy-cold, early spring Chicago is another one with some growing momentum now that the Rocky Mountain Audiofest in Denver is defunct.
In early November of 2022, I traveled from Los Angeles to Rockville, Maryland to see another contender for customer outreach, the Capital Audiofest. Only 45 minutes outside of Washington D.C., the event is what most would consider a pretty traditional consumer audiophile show. The show is run by a mix of audiophile manufacturers along with retailers who brought their wares to a few floors of an easy-to-navigate Hilton hotel in an area of Maryland that has a lot of new construction buildings and roads, and even light rail connecting the suburbs to the city.
The importance of consumer audiophile shows is growing as the number of retailers willing to show high-end audio is decreasing nationally. In the big cities (especially in Manhattan) most stores are now on a by-appointment basis and have moved to second floors (and higher) to hope to justify the high costs for rent. Other dealers are more focused on custom installation, while the ones with audiophile roots often can’t justify the high expense of flooring as many big-ticket audiophile products. Shows are an important way to hear more and more audio in a short period of time. They are also great for making personal connections as the people whose name are often signed to the front of your preamp or speakers might just be standing in front of you and willing to answer any and all of your questions. Going into 2023, audiophile shows are an increasingly important way to get people involved in our hobby but the fear is that we will simply promote to the same folks repeatedly and do it in the same, conventional way when finding new consumers and enthusiasts is the key to success when it finally comes time to pass the baton on from the founding Baby Boomers to a younger generation of audiences.
Here are some ideas ranging from small to large, as well as practical to aspirational, to help improve these shows in 2023 and from now on.
1. The Value Room (a.k.a. How About a Starter $1,500 Audio System at an Audiophile Show?)
Rocky Mountain Audiofest embraced this concept and it needs to be replicated sooner than later at other audiophile shows. Too many rooms at these shows are loaded with five-figure components designed for 1/10 of one percenter clients. Just as a test drive in a new Ferrari is a lot of fun, so are auditioning these big-ticket systems, but where does a new enthusiast get started? How to they get excited about the hobby? Most stores can show a client a good starting point, but why not audiophile show demos? We can fix this one and create some enthusiasm with new users when they see they can actually afford to get started in this hobby.
2. Only Play Relevant Music (That, of Course, Sounds Great Too)
At my brand new audiophile publication designed to reach younger and more diverse audience, FutureAudiophile.com, we put specific details into our Style Guide for selecting musical material for reviews. The rule states that if you are looking at musical cliché on a scale of 0 to 100, aim to land in the 50 to 75 percent range. This would work at a show, too, where audiophile demo rooms could skip the Dark Side, Aja, Jazz at The Pawnshop, Rumors and Hotel California as they are closer to the 100 percent mark for musical cliché. However, demos won’t land with younger audiences if they have grossly obscure music either, as having no emotional tie to the music being played is a great way to not like a pretty good sounding audio system. There is a balance that needs to be struck here. This is why carefully considered demo playlists are such a good idea.
Personally, I have been challenging myself to find music for my reviews that are new enough that they weren’t ever played on the cassette deck of my Mom’s 1984 Honda Accord. I’ve found a few good new records too. An Evening With Silk Sonic (Bruno Mars, Andersen Paak & Bootsy Collins) record is a modern, funky-soulful gem. My brother is the lead guitar tech for a rock/metal band called Turnstile, who just got three Grammy nods. They have punk, electronic and 1980s flare to their songs on top of their metal roots, which makes them a lot more compelling to listen to on a good audio system. Older artists like Ozzy have good sounding, modern records out. Bjork’s new record is odd (no kidding, right) but excellent sounding. The song “Atlas, Rise” from the latest Metallica record is a pretty strong demo from a new recording. The new Foo Fighters record is outstanding too, with their well-layered and highly overdubbed singles sounding specifically good yet still familiar.
MartinLogan Motion XT F100 Floorstanding Speakers Listening Impressions
3. Demos Should Be Scripted and Timed (i.e. Not Opened Ended, Random-Ass Audiophile Dork-Alongs)
AV companies are welcomed to steal this move from my days working at Cello and make an audiophile show demo a five to 10 minute experience with no track playing more than about 1:30 (or to the first chorus) before rolling down the volume. Use multiple sources to keep the demo flowing. Make sure every seat in the room sounds great, the lighting is dimmed correctly and people are ready to be WOWED. Perhaps procure the hotel room next door for staging and pre-selling the upcoming audiophile experience with some retailer and-or AV manufacturer staff?
At Cello, we printed tickets and bought a red velvet rope as we created a unique experience you couldn’t just walk into and hear. There was anticipation and a little bit of drama. You had to hear our demo and the audience would wait in line for more than an hour to see what rare musical goodies Mr. Levinson and our team had cooked up for them. It was purely experiential and very unique. If you wanted more (like the philosophy behind a three-hour tasting menu at The French Laundry restaurant in Yountville, California) we would be more than willing to accommodate you after-hours at the show or at our showrooms in Los Angeles or New York. Chef Thomas Keller is famous for always wants his patrons wanting just a little bit more. Perhaps that is a good standard for audiophile shows versus having a room filled with people listening but not sharing the audio experience?
4. Do Whatever It Takes To Lower The Median Age At These Audiophile Shows
Headphone show, CAMJAM, does an excellent job at this and the more traditional audiophile shows should steal a page from their book and do whatever it takes to get a younger and more diverse audience into their events. Offer members of the local audiophile society free tickets to bring their kids, younger friends, interested neighbors and so on. Work with local colleges to see if kids want a curated tour of the show and an introduction to how technology and music can make their lives better. Whatever it takes, there needs to be more new blood at these shows. FutureAudiophile.com plans to help with this in partnership with our clients starting in 2023.
5. Negotiate More Attractive Dates For Audiophile Shows
I am definitely going to the AXPONA show in Chicago this spring but I am not looking forward to the weather, which can be just brutal in that part of the world at the end of March. A show date booked a few weeks later might cost a little bit more in terms of hotel cost, but it is worth it to lure more enthusiasts who likely need to get on an airplane to attend said show. More cost sucks, but more attendees make up for it. Make it younger and more diverse audiences and the higher costs are fully justified.
6. Always Have Extra Audiophile Source Components And Materials In Your Demo Room
Qobuz was an enthusiastic sponsor of Capital Audiofest, and people were rocking digital streaming in many rooms. The problem was the hotel’s Internet wasn’t setup for such high bandwidth demand and became sketchy. Some more tech savvy companies got their streaming working over cellular 5G connections and others were stuck with awkwardly quiet rooms. Have a phone, iPad or laptop with your key demo songs setup as a backup is a good plan for future shows even if streaming is the chosen audio source. None of us can control the Internet, so it is good to be prepared. Hell, a CD player or an old Oppo isn’t the worst idea to bring with you if you plan to do a weekend’s worth of high performance audiophile demos. Stash it in the bathroom or closet in case of an audio emergency.
7. NEVER Display Extra Pair Of Speakers In Your Audiophile Show Demo Room
Pick your date for the prom and stick with him or her. Making one pair of speakers in a hotel room sound good is a hell of a challenge on its own. There are so many acoustical problems in hotel room audio we could do an entire article on that tricky topic. One of the biggest and most easily solved issues is to not have the entire speaker line in your room. Don’t park them anywhere close to your active speakers, or ideally keep them out of the main listening room all together. Resist the urge to display or use them because the drivers in the other speakers sympathetically vibrate and cause all sorts of super-funky audio issues. You can “short the speakers out” with speaker cable from the left to the right speaker connector but it is even better to leave them at home or put them in a secondary room so that you can address all the other meaningful challenges that you will face when setting up a hotel-based audio system.
8. Make a Costco Run Before The Show And Your Potential Customers Will Love You For It (a.k.a. Everyone Loves Free Food)
I don’t care how much inflation has raised prices, most AV companies or dealers exhibiting at an audiophile show can afford to buy a few cases of bottled water and some pre-packaged, premium candy. Being able to hand someone an ice cold drink of water is a very affordable and super-easy way to put a smile on their face, and remembering how that made them feel will go a long way with customers. Additionally, putting out a big-ass bowl of the good candy (Reese’s, Snickers, Twix – the good stuff) allows people to grab something that gives them a short-term fix when they might not have anything to eat for hours and hours. Your $200 trip to Costco is worth many times that in goodwill with the people that come into your room.
9. Rent Plants, Lights, Seating and More From a Real Estate Staging Company
You can easily rent anything for the home these days. Home staging companies that realtors use charge a pretty penny, but they will dress up a room in ways that looks better than what is seen at nearly every audiophile show. These firms can provide seating. They can provide art. They can install plants that hide or help with acoustics. They can deliver lighting solutions that make your products look better and the room more inviting. Just like with food in a restaurant, what you see is up there with what you taste in terms of overall enjoyment. Audio is the same way. Imagine walking into a room where cables are managed, the equipment is neatly displayed and back lit and there are non-folding chairs to sit in? That’s an all together novel experience and would be worth a few thousand dollars to make a genuine statement about how said expensive gear actually fits into a living space.
Some Additional Audiophile Show Thoughts From Back Home
It was great to be out again and to see some old friends after a brutal few years for me and after general COVID precautions have kept us all apart. The health and well-being of these regional audiophile shows is important to the future of our hobby and the audiophile community can help just as much as the promoters of the shows themselves. It is a group effort and together, we can start bringing in a new generation of enthusiasts who likely will enjoy decades of good audio because of these events. That’s the future that we should aspire to.
jaananhi464 posts on July 11, 2022 04:28
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Verdinut posts on July 04, 2022 22:09
HackMan55, post: 1563729, member: 96019
I believe the two biggest barriers to young people being introduced to home audio are money and exposure. I’m not sure many people, regardless of age, know just how much better their sound can be.I didn’t get into it until later in life, when I was about forty. Other than a few friends who were into car audio, I never knew anyone who put much time or effort into audio and had never been exposed to any quality systems. I was content with a sound bar, blissfully ignorant of what I was missing out on.
After I got a job installing satellite, I was working at an install for some rich old farmer. He was more than happy showing off his home theater room and his sound system blew me away. I had never seen or heard anything like it. That night I set about learning what I could to improve the audio in my home.
Now I knew I wouldn’t be able to have the same quality set up he had with his expensive and custom gear. But I knew I’d at least be able to make a significant improvement on what I did have.
My employer gave us bonus points for various things that could be used towards different products and services. I had accrued plenty with no real idea of what to use them on. I used them to get all my initial gear, methodically building a 5.1 system. It wasn’t (and isn’t) high quality stuff but was still a huge improvement over that sound bar. Not only that, but I really enjoyed learning about it. Not knowing anyone I could ask questions to and not being around actual sound systems was a hindrance, but reading and researching and looking around for deals is still a blast.
If I hadn’t been routed that job at that guys house, I’d probably have never known what I was missing. And if I didn’t have those award points to get my initial gear, I’d have probably gotten overwhelmed by the cost of putting a decent system together.
I’ve added a few things here and there to that original 5.1 set up (currently running 9.2) but for the most part am still using the same stuff. My home theater system sucks compared to 99% of the people in these forums (why I rarely post, lol)….but is better than 99% of the people I meet in real life. That, along with the fun of learning about it and putting it together, makes it worth the time, attention, and cost the hobby requires.
Sorry for turning a post into a novel.
Yes, you put the nail on some of the main reasons, exposure and money. In my post No. 32 above, my idea of a joint venture between a car dealer and a specialized Hi-Fi and AV equipment store, was to allow exposition to good audio reproduction, since most of the new generations don’t even know how can a good Hi-Fi or home theater system system perform, but they buy cars. Most of them have not even assisted to a live acoustic concert. That’s quite different from listening to compressed mp3 sound tracks and so on.
As you surely know, for a store to be successful in business, it has to be well located in a community or a city. Exposition is of prime importance. It’s unfortunate and the risk that high fidelity sound reproduction at home disappear with the years really exists.
HackMan55 posts on July 04, 2022 21:40
I didn’t get into it until later in life, when I was about forty. Other than a few friends who were into car audio, I never knew anyone who put much time or effort into audio and had never been exposed to any quality systems. I was content with a sound bar, blissfully ignorant of what I was missing out on.
After I got a job installing satellite, I was working at an install for some rich old farmer. He was more than happy showing off his home theater room and his sound system blew me away. I had never seen or heard anything like it. That night I set about learning what I could to improve the audio in my home.
Now I knew I wouldn’t be able to have the same quality set up he had with his expensive and custom gear. But I knew I’d at least be able to make a significant improvement on what I did have.
My employer gave us bonus points for various things that could be used towards different products and services. I had accrued plenty with no real idea of what to use them on. I used them to get all my initial gear, methodically building a 5.1 system. It wasn’t (and isn’t) high quality stuff but was still a huge improvement over that sound bar. Not only that, but I really enjoyed learning about it. Not knowing anyone I could ask questions to and not being around actual sound systems was a hindrance, but reading and researching and looking around for deals is still a blast.
If I hadn’t been routed that job at that guys house, I’d probably have never known what I was missing. And if I didn’t have those award points to get my initial gear, I’d have probably gotten overwhelmed by the cost of putting a decent system together.
I’ve added a few things here and there to that original 5.1 set up (currently running 9.2) but for the most part am still using the same stuff. My home theater system sucks compared to 99% of the people in these forums (why I rarely post, lol)….but is better than 99% of the people I meet in real life. That, along with the fun of learning about it and putting it together, makes it worth the time, attention, and cost the hobby requires.
Sorry for turning a post into a novel.
Teetertotter? posts on July 01, 2022 14:04
When Staz came out in the early 90’s with DD, that is when I purchased my first AVR and 4 speakers…..WOW…Big time. Rear speaker wiring was routed via basement joists and up through the rear stud wall. The speakers were from Radio Shack and the AVR from a local Hi-Fi/Communications store. I can’t remember where I read about a HT set-up.
Anyway, There is probably only 3% of the Adult population interested in HT. Big TV and sound bar these days. Low Budget. My wife can care less with my basement HT set-up. As long as she has her 55″ with no sound bar…….she is happy in the living room. lol We are now in our 3rd smaller ranch home, retired , since 2008.
jeffca posts on June 20, 2022 17:23
If you are thinking that the industry is going to start making equipment that costs around $10K per unit and get young enthusiasts to buy it, you have lost your mind.
Some of the best audio gear on the planet is quite reasonably priced. That is what the audio press should be promoting… high ROI equipment rather stuff that costs a lot.
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