Toronto Star

Get the most out of your music with deep listening

Playing full albums offers a respite both revelatory and spiritual

- RANDALL ROBERTS

LOS ANGELES—At some point during the pandemic, we’ve all sighed some variation on Willie Nelson’s timeless lyric: “Hello walls. How’d things go for you today?”

Some moments were better than others, Willie. Battling fear, anxiety, rage, mourning and another furious wildfire season, during the most harrowing moments many of us desperatel­y lurched into recorded music’s ever-loving arms.

A few months into Our Year of Horriblene­ss, a thing I wrote on the value of “deep listening” — making time to experience, with no distractio­ns and at ample volume, great albums from start to finish — went viral.

The pitch was simple, a variation on a term that the late composer Pauline Oliveros coined.

Hearing and listening are two different things, she advised. During this chaotic expanse, it’s more important than ever to turn off your eyes, the TV and especially your phone for a few hours by absorbing, with intention, excellent full-length records.

The suggestion resonated with readers, many of whom described spending the endless days with specific albums as a kind of salve. Despite New York Times critic Jon Caramanica’s recent confession of being unable in 2020 to enjoy full albums — or even full songs — in favour of 15-second TikTok clips, for many the act of longplayin­g wasn’t just a coping mechanism, but offered a revelatory, profoundly spiritual respite.

In fact, after watching psyche-testing sorrow and reality-denying antimask ignorance on TVs and phones, vanishing into extended therapeuti­c sessions with Nina Simone, Madlib or Kid Cudi felt like the only rational response.

“We’re bombarded with so much negative press — from the political to the catastroph­es of people dying — and all of this is communicat­ed through screens,” says Wes Katzir, owner of the audio store Common Wave. “Music’s a valid escape — ‘I can’t take anymore. I’ve got to tune this out.’ People found music again and it’s a beautiful thing to witness.”

Coupling a high-definition music streaming service with a basic, no-frills stereo amplifier, laptop, DAC, pair of secondhand speakers (and nice speaker wire) and quality headphones will noticeably improve your listening experience.

But know: you might soon find yourself cruising Craigslist for used audio gear during off hours. If you’re not careful, a few days later you might even end up at a house on a secluded block, $600 in hand, where a genius audiophile named Anthony captures, restores and refines the good stuff. He sold me a late 1970s Harman Kardon power amp that turns your speakers into Mystic Vessels of Sonic Truth.

I know this to be fact after repeatedly — some would say compulsive­ly — playing at full volume Los Angeles-based composer and harpist Mary Lattimore’s 2020 instrument­al album “Silver Ladders.” Sound seems to inhabit the room in three dimensions.

When at one point the sound of gusting wind hitting a microphone drifts into Lattimore’s ethereal harp tones, it seems to come at you from the far end of the horizon. On the mesmerizin­g 10-minute piece “Til a Mermaid Drags You Under,” frequencie­s feel like they’re cascading from one back corner of the room to the other, with heavy bass tones whirlpooli­ng below.

In the first issue of High Fidelity magazine in 1951, founder Milton Sleeper described a letter he’d received from a subscriber whose husband was an audiophile. He loved to show off his stereo to visitors, she wrote, and “has made everyone who hears his system very unhappy, because it is so much better than that with which they are familiar.”

Noting that she was “disturbed at first,” her husband corrected her, mansplaini­ng “that people do not know what high-fidelity reproducti­on is and therefore they have to be shown. I now see his point and agree 100 per cent.”

Seventy years later, many people again don’t know what highfideli­ty reproducti­on is and need to be shown. Conditione­d across the ’00s by compressed MP3 files and 320kbs streaming files, a plurality of music fans long ago ditched the tangle of wires, boxy speakers and black stereo components in favour of wireless, clock-radio-sized Bluetooth speakers, a Sonos system or Alexa-powered smart speakers.

Soundbars have supplanted stereophon­ic set-ups. If a home does have a stereo, it’s often in the den chained to the TV, PlayStatio­n or an old-school CD/ DVD black box.

It’s way more efficient to drop a few hundred dollars on decent headphones and beam waves directly onto your eardrums than suffer through a dozen “well, actually” correction­s from an in-store audio nerd. There’s a reason why Apple recently introduced its new AirPods Max luxury headphones and not an Apple stereo receiver.

Consumptio­n habits have, for obvious reasons, changed during the pandemic. Less commuting has meant less solo time with podcasts, playlists and terrestria­l radio. Doomscroll­ing and endless news alerts have sucked away time from exercise playlists. For music fans in particular, the absence of festivals, concerts, gigs and DJ sets has meant that listeners have lost their ability to deeply engage with an artist’s music for a solid length of time.

Data hints at a shift in spending on audio stuff. In December, vinyl posted its biggest singleweek sales tally since SoundScan started keeping accurate numbers in 1991. Surely those buyers are making time to listen to album sides, right?

And the Consumer Technology Associatio­n, a trade group representi­ng hardware manufactur­ers, estimates that turntable units shipped to dealers will shoot up 15 per cent yearover-year and stereo receivers will amp up by six per cent in 2021. Sales of these components, however, are dwarfed when compared to the volume of smart speakers and soundbars spreading music into homes.

Anecdotall­y, component and system sales are up “a little bit” compared with last year at Common Wave. Owner Katzir believes something bigger is at play than mere commerce, though. Whether through headphones, desktop speakers or a fancy system, he says, “the consumptio­n of music has changed, because people now have time to give the music the time it actually deserves.”

He says that some customer interactio­ns have turned into virtual therapy sessions. “Being cooped up at home, now they finally have time to listen to music the way an artist might intend.”

“Awesome audio quality really is within reach. It’s not some esoteric ideal that you would never be able to attain,” says Dan Mackta, managing director of Qobuz USA, which entered the U.S. market in 2019. “If you’ve got a couple hundred bucks to invest, you can upgrade your listen 8,000-fold.”

The French company, born in 2008, was the first music service to sell CD-quality, 16bit/44.1kHz downloads and the first to offer CD-quality, 16bit/44kHz files for streaming. Unlike giants Spotify and Apple Music, both of which focus on popular music across their landing pages, Qobuz targets appreciato­rs of jazz, classical and more niche genres — though it offers the same top sellers as other services.

Cranked when listening on Qobuz to “Iron Path,” the ferocious 1987 metal-jazz masterpiec­e by the quartet Last Exit, the end sounds nigh. A 10-song, 36-minute instrument­al record built by bassist-producer Bill Laswell, electric guitarist Sonny Sharrock, tenor saxophonis­t Peter Brotzmann and drummer Ronald Shannon Jackson, it roars out of the system when the volume knob’s upped.

A great song is a great song no matter how it makes its way into your head. Whether on AM radio or through a $100,000 system, Beyoncé’s “Crazy in Love” will whip your wits every time. If protesters are chanting Kendrick Lamar’s “Alright,” nobody’s asking them to adjust their levels to account for the outdoor acoustics.

That said, love the melodies, hooks and bridges all you want, but don’t neglect the tones, dynamics and precisely placed aural Easter eggs, for within them lie entire universes.

 ?? ANTHONY TOMMASINI THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Some of the New York Times critic Anthony Tommasini’s vinyl LPs. The chief classical music critic writes in praise of going to a shelf, pulling out a recording and sitting down to listen.
ANTHONY TOMMASINI THE NEW YORK TIMES Some of the New York Times critic Anthony Tommasini’s vinyl LPs. The chief classical music critic writes in praise of going to a shelf, pulling out a recording and sitting down to listen.

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