Mr Fremer appears to be the archetypal 'Sound over Music' audiofool. I doubt very much that he uses an original 45 of 'Jailbait' to evaluate his expensive assembly of audio goodies.
All things considered, my own 54 year audio adventures would seem to qualify me as a crank. When you have a serious record collecting habit and a relatively limited income, you will almost always prioritise the records. However, due to my late father's tutoring I did appreciate the need to respect my records by playing them on a decent system. Hence 70% of my audio purchases were, and still are, second-hand or self built./refurbished.
I was fortunate that my first career mentor was a former WW2 communications specialist with SOE. His civilian job was with R&D at the famed M-O Valve company, manufacturers of high quality tubes. Through him I met another ex M-O V engineer who designed tube amp circuits. In 1979 this gentleman gave me a copy of a US magazine called 'The New Testament', a very amateurish A5 pamphlet similar to a punk music fanzine.
The New Testament concentrated solely on reproducing the sound of vinyl records via tube amps. The author took an iconoclastic view of the then high-end tube amp makers such as Conrad Johnson and Audio Research, pointing out that roughly 70% of the customer price of these amps went to cover advertising, fancy cabinet decoration and bribes to reviewers. He detailed a costing of one tube amp which showed that the parts costs were less than 10% of the total price. He also questioned why if the amp was so perfect, a (more expensive) upgrade would appear a few months later? Clearly, for all his insights, this person had a poor grasp of commerical reality. He did however, include a schematic of what he claimed to be the ultimate tube phono only preamp. He christened it the NB-1, with NB short for 'No Bullshit'
I built an NB-1 using military grade tubes, Lemo plugs and sockets and other quality components. I remember as though it were yesterday the first time I cranked up the NB-1 and played a 45, a mono recoring from 1958. The sonic image was truly astonishing. But the NB-1 had a flaw in the power supply design which seriously limited tube life. My old M-O V friend modified the NB-1 to overcome this and I still use a mono version of the amp for playing 45s. But in all those years, despite endless tinkering and tube rolling, I have never been able to capture that magic I experienced with the original beast. Almost like seeing Elvis in 1954 or The Stones in '63 and then having to be content with listening to their records.
Here's to audio crankery and $10 interconnects!