I more and more read the word fun used by members in describing their experience with some older, smaller Naim integrated such as the Nait and the Nait2. These units seem to go on the 2nd hand market for sum widely exceeding their objective technological status and commercial age.
Ivor Tiefenbrun (if I remember correctly) once said that if a system made you tap your feet (or foot, one usually just taps one, while the other keeps the balance) then it was a good system ( – or was it Julian Vereker, MBE?). Well, I have sometimes experienced foot-tapping while listening to music, but I can't remember what the gear was. Was it related to the gear or to the music, the moment, the frame of mind? Is fun just letting barriers fall?
A guy I knew in my former life, who owned an audio shop, once said to me If you love the Naim sound, then you love the Nait, because it is quintessentially Naim sounding. He didn't himself by the way, but seemed to recognise and acknowledge that something which sometimes escapes me:
What is fun? What is it in music reproduction in the home? Is it a repeatable experience? Has it more to do with the equipment or with the person? Is it related to power? Is the audio myth according to which smaller, less powerful amps frequently sound better than bigger, more powerful ones, true? Then, if that is the case, what shall we do with the objective fact that a bigger amp controls better everything in the music reproduction – the woofers, dynamics, space, detail? As I have wondered lately as a consequence of my wonderful experience with the NAP300DR, that has changed a pair of SHL5s into lively, engaging sound machines, what has Naim worked on, and for, over the last 35 years if the Nait was all we could wish?
And, last, is there antagonism, or incompatibility, between realism and fun? Is fun a function of nostalgia and personal freedom too, since these discussions on the Nait always come up when new, more costly, more up-to-date, more technological and powerful models are introduced?
Thanks for your thoughts.
Max
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by Massimo Bertola
Ciao Chris,
thanks for your reply. I replay my FF+2 LPs on Pioneer PL112D, Pioneer SA-7300 and AR4x (one of which has a slightly defective tweeter) – more or less the system I had in 1975. It provides a partial reply, indeed! As I have told you, there has never been a single bad day that some FF+2 couldn't somehow turn into a smile and lighter heart; but that has to do with nostalgia, and the fact that the music is great, and my current low expectations about that system's qualities.
So, if you're right, are we all wasting our time, mental energy and money on a lot of useless, overpowered, overpriced electronics? Or is it only my problem?
;-)
M
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by Massimo Bertola
BTW, when I left the home where I had the aforementioned system, it had slightly (?) changed: Thorens TD147, SA-7300 and Linn Kan Is. In the next home – which was my first single's apartment – I had rega Planar 3, Nait, Linn Kan Is... And the 'fun' had already begun to leave place to something else. Today that something else has reached a very different status – and has taken much of my money, mental energy and peace of mind – and here I am, asking all you guys what your idea of fun is: partly trying to explain while some have it, some have not.
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by Massimo Bertola
Loki,
thanks, you've forgotten to add that it was Side One, Track Six...
Joking. Mine was a reference to that song, of course. And it was meant to wonder if fun can be bought by money after all, since it appears that a Nait 1 (1983, 13W) is enough to provide it.
Best
Max
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by badlands
Really good question. I hope I understand what it is you are specifically asking, if I am not, I apologize for my post.
Ask yourself this question. If I wasn't fortunate enough to be able to afford a Naim system, would that change how meaningful listening to music is? I'll try to answer the best I can. I guess, no, actually I know, that at least in my case, I don't need to spend thousands of dollars on equipment to enjoy music, or the need of a powerful amp. To be completely honest, I can listen to a very poorly recorded Springsteen bootleg on a Sony portable CD player and be completely immersed in the music.
Then again, I will listen to an excellent recording on a Naim system and enjoy it just as much as the portable system.
Both are fun to me, both make me tap my feet, I guess I'm lucky enough to be able to experience the difference between the two systems. And both are able to bring me to a place that only music has the magic to do.
Honestly, one is not better than the other in the really big scheme of things, one can technically be better or more advanced, but that really has nothing to do with how much you can enjoy music, because that's what it's all about really, just enjoying the way music makes us feel, don't be concerned with what system does what, just sit back and let music do to you what it does like nothing else can.
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by varyat
I'm all about having "fun" with my gear
. Usually, during the winter months I mess around with different combinations of amps- it gives me great pleasure while the cold, dark , snowy weather passes in my part of the world. I have quite a few boxes which can be mixed and matched endlessly and several runs of Naca to make things a bit easier. It is great fun and I really enjoy it. The smaller amps can certainly entertain and stimulate some foot tapping. Naim made it easy back in the early days.
However, when serious playback is in order I always fall back to my main system. Size does matter. The bigger amps are at a different level imo. They are still "fun " but offer much more insight into the music, you become part of the show not just a bystander. Thats how I feel about it anyway.
I could certainly live with a Nait 1/2 and some Kans and have a great time with it. The music provides the joy. I just get more of it with the bigger amps
.
ATB,
Mark
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by Penarth Blues
"Fun" for me exists when you are immersed in what the music brings - not what it is being replayed on. This can be achieved from cheap systems through to the most expensive but neither end of the spectrum guarantees it.
Last week I posted about the unexpected joy and fun I'd had from my Muso Qb on a Friday evening with friends and family. On considering why in the context of your question, I would note the following as being contributing factors:
- as the volume went up the music did not become unlistenable by over bright tweeters, indeed the opposite happened - the treble became better!
- as the volume went up the bass really started to drive the music with emphasis, but more importantly had the power to provide the beat needed to compel dance. I would say that I think it was better than my main system in this respect, as clearly every part of the system was designed with intimate knowledge of the combined capability of the whole.
- I had no expectations of that level of performance being possible, so it was fun in that everyone was in awe of what it was capable of. Will this be repeated in the future? Probably not as the surprise element has gone, but the rest of the capability remains. A bit like driving a car which is faster than anything you've ever driven before - the fun is in readjusting expectations and performance parameters. When you've readjusted then you can only rediscover that initial thrill by going faster again. I think HiFi is a bit like that - hence some disillusionment setting in once you've grown accustomed to the amazing things your system can do.
- I had no concerns about the main system being damaged by volume or flailing arms and legs, so was relaxed about the volume and motion in the room. I was also relaxed about the Muso being damaged by volume as it was not going to cause too much heartbreak if it happened. This enabled the pleasure of great company all enjoying the same moment to be the paramount emotion
So those are my views on 'fun' in the context of music. Everyone's triggers for fun are different, but I'd guess for most people a lot of it revolves around power and surprise coupled with the unquantifiable reasons why certain pieces of music move us more than others.
Posted on: 08 October 2016 by dayjay
Fun is one element I might look for from my system but it is not the only element. I can get fun from a transistor radio, some of my most memorable music nights as a youngster with with a little radio and it was certainly fun, and so was my Qute but if it's only fun, for me, it isn't giving everything I want from my music. I want accuracy too, and emotion, and I want to hear as much of what the musicians played as possible including the low and high notes and the interplay between musicians. All of those things in balance, including fun, to the limit of my budget is what I am looking for. Just fun is a little one dimensional even for a fat middle aged man oon his way to balding.