GOODSOUND!GoodSound! "Editorial" Archives

June 1, 2008

 

"Real-World" -- but in What World?

I looked at the cover of the April/May issue of The Abso!ute Sound with some surprise. On it is a photo of the Usher Audio Technology Be-20 loudspeaker, with a caption above: "World-Class Sound, Real-World Price." The "World-Class Sound" part didn’t surprise me -- I’m quite familiar with Usher’s speakers, having reviewed two of them, and I wouldn’t be surprised if the Be-20, their top model, can compete head-on with the best of the best. It was "Real-World Price" that got me: The Be-20 costs $16,400 USD per pair. If that’s a real-world price, in what world is it real?

Microsoft’s Encarta dictionary defines real-world as "relevant or practical in terms of everyday life," which is pretty much how I’d always understood the term. But no matter how good it might be, a speaker costing $16,400/pair doesn’t fit that definition. For most people, that’s just way too much money to spend on a loudspeaker for it to be a practical or relevant expense.

But while expensive audio gear gets a lot of press and attention-getting headlines, there aren’t all that many buyers for gear at those prices -- and their small number doesn’t even include audio reviewers like me. When I look at the SoundStage! Network’s staff of about 30 writers, only a handful own speakers that cost more than $10,000/pair. Furthermore, of the ones who do, in almost every instance those speakers were purchased at an accommodation price -- a special industry-affiliate price that’s roughly the equivalent of dealer cost (usually 30% to 50% off the retail price). In other words, they didn’t pay retail for their expensive speakers, as people in the real world do. As for the rest of our writers, most own speakers that cost under $5000/pair, and the speakers owned by a large proportion of that number cost less than $1500/pair.

Suffice it to say, then, that even audiophile reviewers -- let alone most audiophiles -- rarely spend as much on speakers as what a pair of Usher Be-20s costs. Obviously, given my job, I know many serious audiophiles; just as in the reviewing community, the audiophiles I know who own really expensive stuff are few and far between. Instead, most own equipment priced similarly to that owned by our writers -- which isn’t all that surprising, given that the writers themselves were all hardcore audiophiles before they began writing for us, and were and still are quite representative of audiophiles in general.

As for those of you who are neither reviewers nor audiophiles but who like to have a stereo system to listen to music with, ask yourself this: "How many people have I met who own a pair of speakers costing more than 16 grand?" Chances are, no one. In the real world, people don’t spend nearly that much on speakers. It’s surprising to meet someone who’s spent one grand.

None of this will surprise those who work in the audiophile industry, who have a better grasp than anyone of the audio marketplace. For example, seven years ago, the owners of one large speaker company told me that 80% of the market buys speakers priced under $500/pair, and about 98% of the market buys speakers for under $2000/pair. Granted, inflation and fluctuations in the US dollar will have changed those figures since then, but even if you double them to, respectively, $1000 and $4000, they still come nowhere near $16,400. In short: Contrary to what some would have us believe, the vast majority of audiophiles -- those who, by definition, live in the real world of loudspeaker purchases -- do not spend an arm and a leg on speakers.

The real-world prices of loudspeakers are measured not in the thousands of dollars, but in the hundreds -- precisely the market served by GoodSound! Every product we review carries a price tag that makes it relevant and practical for almost everyone -- and that includes another special speaker from Usher Audio Technology, the S-520, which Thom Moon reviews this month. In fact, the stand-mounted, two-way S-520 is so affordable -- $479/pair -- that some might call it a steal. Usher has come up with another speaker at a real-world price -- and this time, for real.

…Doug Schneider

E-mail comments to the editor@goodsound.com.


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