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    The Computer Audiophile

    An Audiophile On Vacation

     

     

    I've never previously announced or written about taking a vacation. In previous years, the old adage "when the cat's away, the mice will play" would've rang true within five minutes of my plane taking off. More recently, the Audiophile Style community has really come together and managed to live with people's differing views, without screaming "Oh the humanity," à la Herbert Morrison. For this reason, I'm happy to write an article detailing my vacation plans and how I manage a music addiction away from the 20,000 albums on my NAS. 

     

    I'd originally planned a little different style of article, but I received an email from a friend suggesting people may be interested in reading what I do for music when I travel and sharing their own experiences. So, here's a peak into my vacation and how I'll satisfy my needs to listen to music in high quality, away from home. I look forward to reading how others do it, and hope to pick up a tip or two before I leave. 

     

    Note: Content will keep flowing here on Audiophile Style. Our wonderful team of writers has already delivered articles that I will publish from the beach :~)

     


    The Trip

     

    Kauai.jpgMy wife, daughter, and I are going to the Hawaiian island of Kauai for two weeks! This trip has been planned for nearly two years, and literally nothing is going to stop us from having an incredible vacation. We've done, and continue to do, all we can to stay safe and healthy, and it's time to live a little. 

     

    Kauai is right up our alley, without much nightlife and plenty of beautiful places to relax and rejuvenate. We are staying half the time in Poipu and the other half in Hanalei. We scheduled a Na Pali Coast catamaran tour with Blue Ocean Adventure Tours and a special dinner another night, but have left the remaining time pretty much open. It's one of life's luxuries to wake up and do whatever you feel like doing, without a schedule to keep or a single commitment. In my much younger years, I would've had big New Year's Eve plans. This year, we'll likely be watching the Times Square ball drop from an iPhone on the beach. New Year's Eve is amateur night anyway, right?

     

    We are looking forward to escaping the Minnesota snow and doing as little work as possible. 

     


    Music and Playback

     

    A two week vacation away from my main audio system, and even my fantastic desktop audio system, is much easier in 2021 than it was when this site started in 2007. Back then, both hardware and music content were cumbersome. I used to load up an iPod Classic's 160GB drive and call it a day. Now, we have true high end portable players and an endless music library in either the commercial cloud or a personal cloud. Life is good for the music loving audiophiles. 

     

    Over the years I've used many different portable audio systems when traveling. I've had Astell&Kern units, an Android phone, and many different iPhones. At first blush, the Astell&Kern style player seems like the one I would use for travel. However, I just don't like them enough to use them and bring them on a trip. The sound is fantastic, but the interface is lacking and it's yet another device to pack. 

     

    My go-to hardware source right now is my iPhone 12 Pro with 512GB of storage. The interface and app selection are second to none. Plus, I need to bring this device even if I wasn't listening to music. It isn't an additional device in my carry-on. 

     

    Getting the best sound quality from my iPhone 12 Pro, with portability in mind, is my goal. I have two ways to do this. One is way over on the convenience side of the continuum and the other is my choice for high quality and portable hardware. 

     

    I always bring the Apple Lightning to 3.5mm headphone jack adapter for convenience. This $9.00 DAC is as flexible as they get and I won't care too much if I misplace it on the plane or in the rental car. It certainly isn't the height of audio living, but it's a tool that gets the job done when needed. 

     

    I always bring one or two AudioQuest DragonFlys for quality. The DragonFly Red and the DragonFly Black, usually work equally well with my headphones. I like the Black for its analog volume control and the Red for everything else. Given the small size of these units, it's simple to bring both. I connect the Flys to my iPhone 12 Pro with Apple's Lightning to USB 3 Camera Adapter. This adapter has both a USB port for the DragonFly and a Lightning port to continuously power the phone and Fly. 

     

    er4srearphones.jpgThe headphones I'm bringing on this trip are the Etymotic ER4SR, with Comply soft memory foam tips. This combination sounds fantastic, feels fantastic, and is a relative bargain for high end audio. I also have the Etymotic ER3SE that may come along on the trip, to use in case of an emergency. Both headphones are highly recommended. 

     

    I've had Etymotic ER series headphones off/on for over 15 years. I recently switched from my custom IEMs to the Etymotics because they sound better, hold up better, and with the comply tips are actually more comfortable. I wish I hadn't sunk the $1,000+ into the customs. 

     

    That's at the hardware I'm bringing. It's pretty basic, but fully capable of great sound on the go, and do't put me over the airline weight limit.

     

    I depend on a couple different apps while traveling. My daily driver is the Qobuz native app. I will fill up as much of my 512GB iPhone as possible with offline albums because the flight is long and the mobile phone service in Kauai is spotty on good days. The other app I use is VOX. VOX enables me to access my entire album collection from anywhere in the world because I've uploaded it to the VOX servers. I have plenty of Three Blind Mice, Mobile Fidelity, and other albums that aren't available on any streaming service. Plus, there's no way I'm connecting my iPhone to my Mac and synchronizing music like the old days. VOX has all my music and has offline capability. Prior to leaving, I will offline several albums in VOX, that I know aren't available through Qobuz. 

     

    If, for some reason I can't get something I need, I connect back to my house via VPN for full access to everything on my network, as if I was home. This is always the failsafe last resort. 

     

    The complete system is really lightweight and simple. 

     

    iPhone > Qobuz & VOX > USB adapter > DragonFly > Etymotic earphones. 

     


    Good Listening

     

    51XSWGjV6mL._SL500_.jpgBefore wrapping up and taking time off, I want to share some music related content that I recently found. The Audible Originals series has a category called Words + Music, that contains terrific biographical stories narrated by some really great artists. The first one that got me hooked on the series was called I Am Mine, by Pearl Jam's Eddie Vedder. In this 1 hour and 22 minute audio story, Eddie talks about his early days prior to Pearl Jam, how he met people that connected him to the band, and the origins of some Pearl Jam songs. He also sings a couple songs and plays acoustic guitar, delivering versions unavailable anywhere else. This is a really neat series, with episodes available starting at $6.95 each. 

     

    Some notable episodes, all narrated by the artist: Eddie Vedder, Liz Phair, Sharon Van Etten, Alice Cooper, Elvis Costello, Rhiannon Giddens, Steve Earle, Gary Clark Jr., Yo-yo Ma, Sting, Smokey Robinson, Alanis Morissette, T Bone Burnett, Sheryl Crow, Tom Morello, James Taylor, and Patti Smith. 

     

    51tjmlEs9vL._SL500_.jpg 5161r6jM00L._SL500_.jpg 41g1nLoWLiL._SL500_.jpg 51AY3hc8xqL._SL500_.jpg 41CZK-OKusS._SL500_.jpg

     


    Wrap Up

     

    I want to give both the Audiophile Style writers and the Audiophile Style community a gigantic THANK YOU!. You all are the best in high end audio and this site wouldn't exist without you.  For everyone that celebrates, have a Merry Christmas and happy new year. 

     

    Now, queue Sheryl Crow's Soak Up The Sun video (filmed in Hawaii), and take note of one of my favorite lyrics of all time. 


    "It's not having what you want, It's wanting what you've got"


    OK, I'm out :~)

     

     

     

     

     




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    I'm on vacation now, nowhere warm but I live in California.

     

    I often go through the hassle of taking a pair of Sonos Play:1 speakers for longer trips. I can't say I'm usually glad I did because they get maybe 90 minutes of use per day. I need to stop the practice; I don't think they sound very good.

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    SKIP the audio on this trip. The Island has so much to take in on its own sounds. 

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    Being a light travelling part-time nomad myself, I've perfected my setup.
    For the 'real travel' I have learnt to live with my Senn PXC-550 II and a ADATA mil spec 5TB drive for music and backups.
    I used to bring Etymotic's and full size cans, but better BT ANR cans just made it too ridiculous. 

    Cheating a little, I now have 3 nice Genelec rigs distributed the 3 places I mostly go (gf, boat, friend).
    And yes, my boat actually have a set of Genelec 8010's with a 5040 sub - awesome in a small space!
    Also - both are class D so only sips power!
    We all do what we have to survive :-) 

     

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    20 minutes ago, DigiPete said:

    Being a light travelling part-time nomad myself, I've perfected my setup.
    For the 'real travel' I have learnt to live with my Senn PXC-550 II and a ADATA mil spec 5TB drive for music and backups.
    I used to bring Etymotic's and full size cans, but better BT ANR cans just made it too ridiculous. 

    Cheating a little, I now have 3 nice Genelec rigs distributed the 3 places I mostly go (gf, boat, friend).
    And yes, my boat actually have a set of Genelec 8010's with a 5040 sub - awesome in a small space!
    Also - both are class D so only sips power!
    We all do what we have to survive :-) 

     

    Awesome!

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    Love the Etys but my 4SRs disintegrated so now use the 2SEs...only thing I did not like about the 4's are the difficult connection for cables.  Standard...but not really.  I was hoping you had grabbed a pair of the EVOs for a review😁

     

    Have a great trip!  Love Kauai!

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    Chord Hugo 2 + Chord 2Go with 2tb of storage has been what I’m using for travel. Works well. 

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    Wow, I've loved visiting Hawaii every time I've been there.  I wish I could go there without having to quarantine for 2 weeks upon return. I met up with a large bunch of people for some martial-arts-related practice while I was there, and we had an absolutely fantastic time. I only took noise-cancelling headphones for the plane as I knew I wouldn't be listening to music while I was there. It'd be interesting to consider what I'd take now. One thing I considered was choosing a good pair of IEMs, and listening with them on the plane while wearing noise cancelling headphones over them, but I don't like having anything in my ears for long periods.

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    15 minutes ago, Currawong said:

    I only took noise-cancelling headphones for the plane as I knew I wouldn't be listening to music while I was there. It'd be interesting to consider what I'd take now. One thing I considered was choosing a good pair of IEMs, and listening with them on the plane while wearing noise cancelling headphones over them, but I don't like having anything in my ears for long periods.

     

    One thing you might consider would be custom IEMs, molded to your ear canal, as recommended by Chris a couple of years ago.  On his advice, I replaced Etymotics with Ultimate Ears, and found a world of difference in sound quality, comfort, and noise isolation.  You can listen blissfully all day.  Only downside is the noise isolation is too good for these to be worn outdoors (or anyplace where your ears might need to warn you of oncoming danger).  They are steep--I dropped about $1500--but if you are traveling long distances and/or regularly for work, they are worth every penny.

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    Enjoy the trip! I could use some help.

     

    I can’t get my Dragonfly Cobalt to work with my iPhone 12 (iOS 15.2). Using the Apple Lightning to USB3 adapter recommended at the AQ website, I see the red standby indicator light illuminate on my Dragonfly Cobalt. But no music comes from the connected headphones. Instead, music plays through the iPhone’s internal speakers. Any ideas?

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    My travel rig is very similar, the only substantial differences being tunes from home through a homebrew setup, and an iFi hip-DAC, a birthday gift from my brother.

     

    Kauai and nothing much to do sound great. 😊 All the best!

     

     

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    I've had Etymotic ER series headphones off/on for over 15 years. I recently switched from my custom IEMs to the Etymotics because they sound better, hold up better, and with the comply tips are actually more comfortable. I wish I hadn't sunk the $1,000+ into the customs. 

     

     

    So are you saying  Jh audio $1000 custom headphones are inferior to the $200 Eymotic?

    thanks

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    7 minutes ago, ajay556 said:

    I've had Etymotic ER series headphones off/on for over 15 years. I recently switched from my custom IEMs to the Etymotics because they sound better, hold up better, and with the comply tips are actually more comfortable. I wish I hadn't sunk the $1,000+ into the customs. 

     

     

    So are you saying  Jh audio $1000 custom headphones are inferior to the $200 Eymotic?

    thanks

    No, my JH got stolen when I was robbed in Beverly Hills a few years ago. 

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