Improved quality of life in music?

kokonut

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Has your hearing aid or cochlear implant helped improve your quality of life when it comes to music?

I am asking the same question that I posted two days ago in the Association of Adult Musicians with Hearing Loss forum and will compare responses in AD.

As for me, the answer is an obvious and unequivocal yes! Not only music over the radio, tapes or CD but I also greatly enjoy playing my piano whenever I play ragtime, novelty rags and early Jazz (see Ragtime Piano! ). There's a profound difference in the quality of my life in music with my hearing aid since it adds that additional dimension in depth and breadth in the quality of my life in the world of music. It's simply a matter, and not to be condescending or whatever, that you have to hear in order to understand why this is the case. It's just not music but to hear everything else on how wonderful and remarkable sound can be to listen to.
 
Bump.

Does anybody play any musical instrument while wearing a hearing aid or cochlear implant? If so, has your HA or CI helped improve your quality of life in music?

Thanks.
 
I play the piano, flute, violin and viola. I also sing 1st Soprano. This summer I plan to take private lessons in the harp in addition to the private voice lessons I've been taking since 2004.
 
I play the piano, flute, violin and viola. I also sing 1st Soprano. This summer I plan to take private lessons in the harp in addition to the private voice lessons I've been taking since 2004.

I used to play the Viola... I was in first string.

So long ago... I have really considered getting back into it. Due to I do love the sound and vibration of the Viola. I am missing it.
 
I used to play the Viola... I was in first string.

So long ago... I have really considered getting back into it. Due to I do love the sound and vibration of the Viola. I am missing it.

The vibration of the violin and viola were something I enjoyed as well even when I could still hear.

I was also first string as a violinist and violist.

However, I wasn't that great at playing the flute. Then again, I never had an instructor or band leader who thought I could perform well.

My favorite musical activity is singing. I was a member of the advanced choir in high school and participated in the district level music competition several years in a row receiving gold medals for my performances.

Come to think of it, I still have the cassette recordings of my practice sessions. They go back to 1985-1989. :shock:
 
Violin seems to come up a lot. I played the violin throughout during the 4th grade.

Taught myself to play the saxophone good enough to play in a middle school band but then I had to quit because my piano teacher wanted her (her son's) saxaphone back.

Played the drums since the 6th grade into high school by participating in school bands and symphonies, and marching band as well while in high school. This includes playing the xylophone. I was part of the drum section in marching band (Berkmar High School, Georgia) where we competed in marching band competitions in the southeast (Tenn, Ga, SC, and Florida). It was a cool experience marching to the beats and song while thousands watched us. It took a lot of practice. Lots of fun. Lots of good friends.

Has anyone played in a marching band?
 
Well, I've been able to listen to music without that awful ringing in my ears for the first time in 20 years. I can even make out a few words and even phrases in songs - something I never could do with my HA. I don't have much talent in music though the autoharp is the one instrument I could play well.
 
i never played instruments but right now i suffer from tinnitus Bigtime and am in the waiting list for the CI, probably the Med-el for its 24 channels which meant to be good for music.
I built myself a valve hifi-stereo about 6 years ago.

I made the the speakers and pre-amplifier, soldered all the wiring, my choice of capacitors run the crossover circuits. I replaced all chinese junk with good old American or British military grade valves.

I so terribly miss the music i played, usually 1920's-1940's jazz and some classical.
I wish they'd hurry up on he waiting list, Im fed up with this existence, its making it very difficult to a point that is impossible to study , and to get on with life, I cant talk to anyone about anything interesting as the ringing gets loud when i stress , its a nightmare.
Artists I enjoy listening to are; Choplin, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Mozart, Bjork (yes i like her fantastically strange and highly creative singer), and lots others......

heres the pic

IMG_0040_3.jpg

IMG_0122.jpg

IMG_0089_4.jpg
 
I was a member of my middle and high school marching band from 7th-12th grade.

I also participated in orchestra from 3rd-6th grade and advanced choir from 9th-12th grade.
 
Hear Again, i forgot again sorry to be insensitive, I upload 3 images of my home-made stereo, the pre-amplifier is made from kitset, and i upgraded the internals with world-class capacitors and resistors and used six nines copper wires that is 99.9999997 % pure 6 figures of 9's after the decimal point and there's only 2 foundery in the world makes those wires at this purity. It is extremely hard to obtain, it is better than silver wires as the copper modecules straightened via cryogenic treatments using Liquid nitrogen. (interconnects cables wires were also the same, but from a specialist cryogentic treatment plant)
The main amplifiers (i use 2, one for each speakers, so its 2 monos configurated into stereo) uses old fashioned electronics which have valves.The valves are shaped, feels like weird shaped light bulbs with 6 or 8 or 12 steel pins (some are quite fat more like short rods , on smaller valve these are more like short, stiff wires with not sharp edge just chamfered off the edges. These to plug into sockets which connects to various wires in the circuit. (some valve electronics have PCB printed circuit board -fibreglass boards with copper tracks glued on, this is seldom)
I discarded those cheap chinese imitations valves for the real valves from USA or UK, and they are more than 50 years old, but in brand-new conditions -this took a lot of hunting you can by used, cheaper, but i insisted on some of the best of the best. I am using east german valves on my home made pre-amplifer and they sound amazing (i cant listen to it now, see why im getting impaitent for CI but also i realise i have to learn to hear all over again.....groans...)
the speakers are also home made , stand 60 inches high, 20 inches wide and deep. it have 8 woofer cones, and 1 titanium tweeter in a 'dome' configuration. the woofer cones are metal, 5 inch wides which is small but no means its not a slouch, this speakers is serious business it runs of a 22 watts per channel amps but sounds as loud as a 200 WPC stereo. That is because the speaker were engineered to be extremely sensitive (a parrallel of 4 in series circuits are utilised to achieve that)
the woods are PDF with veener which imitate the Rimu look, New Zealand native wood-grain colour and pattern it is Very nice. as it goes will all my other furniture which are also rimu (real rimu).

I have made braided interconnect cables out of 3 wires twinned in a one over two, and repeat order making this pattern, and soldered with 4 different metal in a solder (copper, tin, lead and silver) these are not hard to get but its not common though.

the valves varies in size the 845 stands 10 inch high with 4 inch wide they run HOT when swtiched on. the tiny valves for the pre amplified stand 3 inch high and 1 inch wide, and the better valves for the main amplifer apart from the 845 is 4 inch high but 2 inch wide these run hotter than the tiny one in the Pre. Lastly there is a big grey valves that comes from Britain its is like a large oblongish 100 W bulb, these run fairly cool. they are shockingly expensive at about $500 each - I have 2. In USA they are $ 250 to $300 each depending on condition and grades.

this is a valve stereo system it not designed for rock music, but when i played Eagle's Hotel California, i was shattered, it was good ! When i play piano solos like Choplin, the whole room seem to have a real piano, hell my neighbour unbeknowist to the stereo for first 6 months i lived here, he thought i PLAYED pianos !!

i have power cables that are imported from USA which are 1 inch thick and it looks like a black boa snakes, these are 'super conductors' - hospital-grade power cords. I went way over board.

Now, how's that for quality of 'life in music' ??
but yes i need the CI soon, and i mean soon im sick of this ringing, in this regard i believe i have middle ear damage (the drum) as it seemed to rattle...shake...but need to discuss with the CI team more throughout to be really ascertain of this.
 
Last edited:
i never played instruments but right now i suffer from tinnitus Bigtime and am in the waiting list for the CI, probably the Med-el for its 24 channels which meant to be good for music.
I built myself a valve hifi-stereo about 6 years ago.

I made the the speakers and pre-amplifier, soldered all the wiring, my choice of capacitors run the crossover circuits. I replaced all chinese junk with good old American or British military grade valves.

I so terribly miss the music i played, usually 1920's-1940's jazz and some classical.
I wish they'd hurry up on he waiting list, Im fed up with this existence, its making it very difficult to a point that is impossible to study , and to get on with life, I cant talk to anyone about anything interesting as the ringing gets loud when i stress , its a nightmare.
Artists I enjoy listening to are; Choplin, Duke Ellington, Miles Davis, Mozart, Bjork (yes i like her fantastically strange and highly creative singer), and lots others......

heres the pic

IMG_0040_3.jpg

IMG_0122.jpg

IMG_0089_4.jpg

wow this setup is guaranteed to blow the windows out of the neighborhood. Awesome.
 
Hear Again, i forgot again sorry to be insensitive, I upload 3 images of my home-made stereo, the pre-amplifier is made from kitset, and i upgraded the internals with world-class capacitors and resistors and used six nines copper wires that is 99.9999997 % pure 6 figures of 9's after the decimal point and there's only 2 foundery in the world makes those wires at this purity. It is extremely hard to obtain, it is better than silver wires as the copper modecules straightened via cryogenic treatments using Liquid nitrogen. (interconnects cables wires were also the same, but from a specialist cryogentic treatment plant)
The main amplifiers (i use 2, one for each speakers, so its 2 monos configurated into stereo) uses old fashioned electronics which have valves.The valves are shaped, feels like weird shaped light bulbs with 6 or 8 or 12 steel pins (some are quite fat more like short rods , on smaller valve these are more like short, stiff wires with not sharp edge just chamfered off the edges. These to plug into sockets which connects to various wires in the circuit. (some valve electronics have PCB printed circuit board -fibreglass boards with copper tracks glued on, this is seldom)
I discarded those cheap chinese imitations valves for the real valves from USA or UK, and they are more than 50 years old, but in brand-new conditions -this took a lot of hunting you can by used, cheaper, but i insisted on some of the best of the best. I am using east german valves on my home made pre-amplifer and they sound amazing (i cant listen to it now, see why im getting impaitent for CI but also i realise i have to learn to hear all over again.....groans...)
the speakers are also home made , stand 60 inches high, 20 inches wide and deep. it have 8 woofer cones, and 1 titanium tweeter in a 'dome' configuration. the woofer cones are metal, 5 inch wides which is small but no means its not a slouch, this speakers is serious business it runs of a 22 watts per channel amps but sounds as loud as a 200 WPC stereo. That is because the speaker were engineered to be extremely sensitive (a parrallel of 4 in series circuits are utilised to achieve that)
the woods are PDF with veener which imitate the Rimu look, New Zealand native wood-grain colour and pattern it is Very nice. as it goes will all my other furniture which are also rimu (real rimu).

I have made braided interconnect cables out of 3 wires twinned in a one over two, and repeat order making this pattern, and soldered with 4 different metal in a solder (copper, tin, lead and silver) these are not hard to get but its not common though.

the valves varies in size the 845 stands 10 inch high with 4 inch wide they run HOT when swtiched on. the tiny valves for the pre amplified stand 3 inch high and 1 inch wide, and the better valves for the main amplifer apart from the 845 is 4 inch high but 2 inch wide these run hotter than the tiny one in the Pre. Lastly there is a big grey valves that comes from Britain its is like a large oblongish 100 W bulb, these run fairly cool. they are shockingly expensive at about $500 each - I have 2. In USA they are $ 250 to $300 each depending on condition and grades.

this is a valve stereo system it not designed for rock music, but when i played Eagle's Hotel California, i was shattered, it was good ! When i play piano solos like Choplin, the whole room seem to have a real piano, hell my neighbour unbeknowist to the stereo for first 6 months i lived here, he thought i PLAYED pianos !!

i have power cables that are imported from USA which are 1 inch thick and it looks like a black boa snakes, these are 'super conductors' - hospital-grade power cords. I went way over board.

Now, how's that for quality of 'life in music' ??
but yes i need the CI soon, and i mean soon im sick of this ringing, in this regard i believe i have middle ear damage (the drum) as it seemed to rattle...shake...but need to discuss with the CI team more throughout to be really ascertain of this.

Grummer,

:ty: for the description. :)

I'm an audiophile myself and it sounds (no pun intended) like you have some great equipment.

Unfortunately, I can't afford anything more expensive than the system I have (a Fisher component stereo from the late 70s and a pair of Realistic Mach 2 floor standing speakers from the early 80s).

It isn't the best system one can have, but it's not the worst either and has given me wonderful performance all of these years.
 
No lol it completely changed my music taste I was heavy metal/rock fan since age 10 and with CI I hated it lol too much going on and guitar disortion bug the hell out of me so I like softer slower simpler music and for some reason music sound better coming from tv than radio, cd player, etc
 
I play the piano and I do believe my hearing aids help with the sound. Music is a huge part of my life as I write it also. There is nothing like the feeling of my fingers touching the piano keys after a bad day. I also used to sing in Jr High and High School, infact I was President of our Choir. Singing has its moments for me because I cannot hear myself as well as I would like. The thought of not hearing music down the road breaks my heart so I listen to is and play it as much as possible.
 
Grummer,

:ty: for the description. :)

I'm an audiophile myself and it sounds (no pun intended) like you have some great equipment.

Unfortunately, I can't afford anything more expensive than the system I have (a Fisher component stereo from the late 70s and a pair of Realistic Mach 2 floor standing speakers from the early 80s).

It isn't the best system one can have, but it's not the worst either and has given me wonderful performance all of these years.

yah < ive read about how some audiphilies restores, or modify this Fisher components units. Fisher are good. I do not know the particular model (althought have seen 1 in particular that they 'worship' and its known to be a real sleeper that with the mod using best capacitors and valve replacement (by that i mean choosing a different brand/type of valve(s) and this thing blows away better units. never heard of those speakers you have but im sure they are good. i couldnt affrod much either thats why i BUILT it. that was an insane part im not in anyway a trained electronic technician or engineer but i did, nuts aye. never again it was scary.
 
heres the pic

IMG_0040_3.jpg

IMG_0122.jpg

IMG_0089_4.jpg


That is totally awesome! Never seen a set up like that before!

I enjoy music with my big ol' wireless headphones or I just crank up the volume.

If I know the song and lyrics, I can pick it up.

New songs, I usually have to look up and read the lyrics along with it to understand and learn it.

That is when I can make out the lyrics.
 
yah < ive read about how some audiphilies restores, or modify this Fisher components units. Fisher are good. I do not know the particular model (althought have seen 1 in particular that they 'worship' and its known to be a real sleeper that with the mod using best capacitors and valve replacement (by that i mean choosing a different brand/type of valve(s) and this thing blows away better units. never heard of those speakers you have but im sure they are good. i couldnt affrod much either thats why i BUILT it. that was an insane part im not in anyway a trained electronic technician or engineer but i did, nuts aye. never again it was scary.

The Realistic Mach 2 floor standing speakers I have are a Radio Shack brand. Realistic was a pretty decent brand back in the 60s, 70s and 80s. They have excellent sound with deep bass.

As for my Fisher receiver, the model number is RS-280. It's an aluminum finish receiver that has digital tuning -- one of the first digital tuners that were made in the late 70s.

Fisher was considered a high end brand back in the 60s, 70s and 80s. It still enjoyed a good reputation in the 90s, but not as much as it did 10 years prior.

By the way, I always make a note of the model numbers for all of the audio equipment I have in case something can't be repaired. This allows me to look for the same model on eBay and find a new or refurbished unit.

I also have 2 GE Superadios that I adore. I have 2 Superadio I's and 2 Superadio II's. They have an excellent tuner that is far more sensitive than anything available today.
 
I play the piano, flute, violin and viola. I also sing 1st Soprano. This summer I plan to take private lessons in the harp in addition to the private voice lessons I've been taking since 2004.

Great line-up. How long have you been playing for each instrument?
 
As for my Fisher receiver, the model number is RS-280. It's an aluminum finish receiver that has digital tuning -- one of the first digital tuners that were made in the late 70s.



its super cool i just found one in ebay and saw some pics of it, its really ahead of its time back then wow, like 10-15 years ahead. and it has excellent specifications too.

This is a super clean and great sounding Powerful High Current Vintage Fisher " Studio Standard " Model RS - 280 AM / FM Stereo Receiver with 180 Watts of AC Power Consumption and 100 Watts Per Channel, in very good condition. This very nice Fisher Receiver comes with Inputs for an Auxilary, Tape One Monitor, Tape Two Monitor, and a Phono. Also, this has Outputs for two sets of Main Speakers. This all Digital Synthesizer Receiver also comes with it's own built in 5 - Band Graphic Equalizer, Digital Frequency Display, Programmable Station Memory Tuning, and built in AM / FM Antenna. Dimensions are 17 3/8" W x 17 1/4" D x 5 1/4" H.

my stereo has no radio (but if i get one i can plug it in no problems),it's just running a CD (redbook) player, using California Audio Labs (now out of business) I tweaked it, and running a pair of 1957 GE 5751 (yes the valves were made on that year and i got it practically *new*, its great (to me), not the *best* valves out there, theres some stupidly expensive ultra rare exotics but my philosophy is to put every in best mild *tune* and have it running equally in synergy right through the system so the sum of the parts is very good.
But i cant hear the damn thing anymore I wish they'd hurry up on the waiting list!!... grrrr
 
its super cool i just found one in ebay and saw some pics of it, its really ahead of its time back then wow, like 10-15 years ahead. and it has excellent specifications too.

This is a super clean and great sounding Powerful High Current Vintage Fisher " Studio Standard " Model RS - 280 AM / FM Stereo Receiver with 180 Watts of AC Power Consumption and 100 Watts Per Channel, in very good condition. This very nice Fisher Receiver comes with Inputs for an Auxilary, Tape One Monitor, Tape Two Monitor, and a Phono. Also, this has Outputs for two sets of Main Speakers. This all Digital Synthesizer Receiver also comes with it's own built in 5 - Band Graphic Equalizer, Digital Frequency Display, Programmable Station Memory Tuning, and built in AM / FM Antenna. Dimensions are 17 3/8" W x 17 1/4" D x 5 1/4" H.

my stereo has no radio (but if i get one i can plug it in no problems),it's just running a CD (redbook) player, using California Audio Labs (now out of business) I tweaked it, and running a pair of 1957 GE 5751 (yes the valves were made on that year and i got it practically *new*, its great (to me), not the *best* valves out there, theres some stupidly expensive ultra rare exotics but my philosophy is to put every in best mild *tune* and have it running equally in synergy right through the system so the sum of the parts is very good.
But i cant hear the damn thing anymore I wish they'd hurry up on the waiting list!!... grrrr

Grummer,

Is the Fisher RS-280 still available on eBay? The reason I ask is because I'd like to buy a second one in case mine needs repair. I've had my receiver since the late 70s and it has worked perfectly to this day, but I worry that at some point, it will stop working.

If you receive a CI and it works well for you, you are going to be amazed at how good your system sounds. I never realized how great my Fisher stereo and Realistic Mach 2 speakers sounded until after I received my CIs. Prior to then, I came very close to selling my entire system because I thought it sounded distorted and muddy.

Fortunately, several friends of mine who have "normal" hearing told me my stereo sounds fine and that the reason it sounded the way it did to me was because of my hearing loss.

I'm so glad I decided to hang onto it because I love listening to it at least an hour/day if not more.
 
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