I think cultural aspirations in general are on a downswing at this time. It's not an exclusively American thing.
But I think we fail to pin the hopes and aspirations of the audio hobby on iTunes (and more importantly now, Spotify) at our peril. It's great that more people are taking up LP as a playback medium, but that group is a tiny subset of a tiny subset of today's music lovers. Simply rehashing the audiophile mantra - Anything But iTunes - is disenfranchising every person under the age of about 45 who has most of their music stored in file-based form. Telling them they are some form of idiot for buying the wrong kind of download is as bigoted as telling people they listen to the wrong kind of music, and it sends real people with real buying dollars screaming from our little world.
We can learn a lot from the headphone folk. Rather than driving away 95% of potential new business, work with what arrives... and then try to make things better. I know a few of the smarter dealers in the UK who hook up something like Arcam's rBlink bluetooth DAC module to an amp and speakers. When that casual person wanders in with a phone full of 'choons', they can play them through a system. In most cases, even if to our refined ears the resultant sound is close to someone tipping a sack of hammers down a glass fire escape, to that casual listener it sounds fantastic. Win them over there, and it's a short jump to "and if you thought that sounded good..."
Unfortunately most don't do that. Instead, you get the "come back with some real music!" or "I don't play that sort of file through this system" snobbery. Do you think that goes down well?
Alan, excellent points!!!!
We should "work" with what the potential initiated customer brings for their listening pleasure.
That being said...and you knew this was coming...low quality is low quality. All of the
politically correct, poetic discourses will not change that. Lossy compression as the defacto
form of listening is going to illicit the type of reactions you might imagine. Garbage in garbage out.
Apple told an unforgivable lie ten years ago when they claimed that 128 AAC was "CD Quality".
The amount of damage done is just about irreversible IMO.
(For portable purposes I have ZERO issues with lossy. I use AAC and MP3 for my iPod and my car,
and I am perfectly happy)