Episodes

  • What happens when AI debates the merits of Beethoven's Symphonies
    Feb 21 2026

    This week's podcast is the second in a cycle of four in which our AI protagonists discuss Beethoven’s 9 Symphonies. Using the same sources as the Hi-Fi Hobbyist did last week, our AI protagonists select and rank their favourite three symphonies, and then go on to justify and debate their choices.

    Whose choice will resonate with you? The Hi-Fi Hobbyist, or one of our AI protagonists?

    It is perhaps appropriate, given the subject matter, that this cycle of podcasts about Beethoven’s symphonies is the most ambitious the HiFi Hobbyist has yet produced.

    This week's music accompanying the podcast is the final movement from Beethoven’s 9th Symphony. The first part covers the section where Beethoven revisits the themes from the preceding movements and effectively rejects them. The second part introduces the Ode to Joy theme, and the podcast concludes with the glorious conclusion to the movement, the Symphony, and Beethoven’s Symphonic output.

    The recording is provided by the European Archive of Music, hosted at musopen.org and made available in the public domain.

    Enjoy the debate and stick around to listen to the conclusion to Beethoven’s 9th Symphony at the end of the podcast.

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    44 mins
  • The HiFi Hobbyist's guide to Beethoven's 9 Symphonies in which select our top 5 Beethoven symphonies
    Feb 14 2026

    This week’s podcast is the first of a four-week cycle. This week we will review Beethoven’s nine symphonies and choose a top five. This will be followed next week by letting our AI protagonists discuss the symphonies and the Hi-Fi Hobbyists ranking.

    After that, the following week’s podcast will consider some of the greatest recordings of Beethoven’s 9 Symphonies cycles, both from a musical and audio perspective, as befits a Hi-fi hobbyist podcast. The four-week cycle will conclude with an AI discussion of the different recordings.

    The podcasts are all accompanied by extracts from the Symphonies. This week’s recordings are performed by performed by The Fulda Symphonic Orchestra, who were recorded live on March 10, 2002 at the Grosser Saal der Orangerie. The recordings are provided by classicals.de and used under Creative Commons - Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 International Licence.

    I hope you enjoy this week’s podcast and if you do, please come back in future weeks for the later podcasts.

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    53 mins
  • The AI Debate about CHi-Fi: Hi-Fi Hobbyists dream or nightmare?
    Feb 7 2026

    This week’s podcast is a generated debate to decide whether Chi-Fi represents a dream or a nightmare for the Hi-Fi Hobbyist. The AI protagonists use the sources from last week's podcast to create their arguments.

    Once again, the music accompanying this podcast consists of tracks of Chinese music by Kazoom, played on traditional Chinese instruments, hosted by Pixabay.com, and used under a Pixabay licence.

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    21 mins
  • Chi-Fi: Is it a HiFi Hobbyists dream, or a nightmare?
    Jan 31 2026

    A few weeks ago, the main Hi-Fi Hobbyist looked at the emergence of Chi-Fi. Chi-Fi describes an industry phenomenon where independent Chinese brands deliver high-performance audio equipment at disruptive prices. It marks a shift from OEM manufacturing of Western designs to the emergence of Chinese designed kit offered by Chinese brands and sold on global platforms such as Amazon.

    This podcast looks in more detail at how it has developed, and the implications for Hi-Fi Hobbyists and Hi-Fi manufacturers in the West.

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    53 mins
  • Two AI protagonists debate whether Class AB or Class D amplification is better
    Jan 24 2026

    In last week's podcast we looked at the different amplifier classes and how they linked to the sound quality of key exemplar amplifiers of each type. One of the conclusions was that the vast majority of modern amplifiers are either Class AB or Class D.

    For this week's podcast, we have generated a debate between two AI protagonists, one championing the virtues of Class AB, the other, the benefits of Class D amplifiers. For accompaniment, we have stuck with electronic techno by Nick Panek, this time a track entitled "Ridiculous". It is hosted by Pixabay and used under a Pixabay licence.

    I hope that you enjoy the debate. Happy listening!

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    21 mins
  • What class is your amplifier in?
    Jan 17 2026

    A few weeks ago, we looked at the the difference between valves and solid-state components such as transistors or integrated circuits in hi-fi amplifiers. One of the issues that emerged from that podcast was the question of amplifier topology or class. It appeared from the research undertaken that the amplifier topology could have as much impact on the ultimate sound as the nature of the devices doing the amplification. In this podcast, we will consider the most common amplifier classes, the characteristics of the sound with which they are associated and some examples of highly regarded amplifiers within each class. The very fact that there are highly regarded amplifiers in each class suggests that no one class is best, but rather each has its own characteristics, and in conjunction with the loudspeakers used will generate its own particular sound quality.

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    23 mins
  • Two AI protagonists debate the merits of the HiFi Hobbyist ranking of Jethro Tull albums
    Jan 10 2026

    In last week's podcast, I selected my favourite five Jethro Tull albums.

    The selection was based on musical and lyrical quality, rather than the sound quality of the original releases, but as this was a Hi-Fi Hobbyist podcast, sound quality was raised, especially in relation to the Steve Wilson remixes where available.

    For this week's podcast, we have generated a debate between two AI protagonists, one set the task of defending my ranking, the other required to oppose it in classic debating fashion.

    We have reused the version of Bourrée from J.S. Bach's Lute Suite in E minor, BWV 996, that inspired Jethro Tull’s famous Bourrée track when Ian Anderson heard Martin Barre play it on his guitar. This version is by Jakob Lindberg, and the recording is in the public domain.

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    20 mins
  • The HiFi Hobbyist Top Five Jethro Tull Albums - Ranked!
    Jan 3 2026

    Jethro Tull have been producing music since 1968, and therefore selecting 5 favourite Jethro Tull albums for this podcast is a difficult task.

    This week's podcast is the Hifi Hobbyist's attempt to select a Top Five Jethro Tull albums. Only five in the list in order to try to explore the merits of each title in some detai,l particularly with reference to the sound quality of each album. The Jethro Tull catalogue has been well served by a series of remixes by Steve Wilson, often on the 40th anniversary of the original release. Many of Jethro Tull’s early albums, in particula,r push the boundaries of what was then technically possible, and this perhaps explains why the quality of some of the original releases was less than ideal.

    In selecting my favourite 5 albums, I have taken into account that some of the Jethro Tull albums can be seen as companion pieces. Thus, a Passion Play and a Thick as a Brick both represent concept albums and share a common tongue-in-cheek approach. Heavy Horses and Songs from the Wood represent a more rural and folksy approach to music. Stormwatch whilst musically similar to Heavy Horses and Songs from the Wood looks forward lyrically to the more apocalyptic themes of A.

    Crest of a Knave and Rock Island represent a harder rock sound, whilst Minstrel in the Gallery and Too old to Rock'n'Roll, Too Young to Die can be seen as concept albums based around relatively short individual tracks.

    In order to reduce my options, I elected to set the criteria that no two albums that represent companion pieces could appear in my top five. The selection is based on musical and lyrical quality, rather than the sound quality of the original releases, but as this is a hifi hobbyist podcast, we will certainly discuss sound quality, especially in relation to the Steve Wilson remixes where available.

    As usual, we cannot use Tull’s music for copyright reasons, so the music featured is a version of Bourrée in E minor from J.S. Bach's Lute Suite in E minor, BWV 996. This is the piece that inspired Jethro Tull’s famous Bourrée track when Ian Anderson heard Martin Barre play it on his guitar. Our version is by Jakob Lindberg, and the recording is in the public domain.

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    32 mins