Audiophile Feed

About Audiophile Feed

No noise, just signal.

What is Audiophile Feed?

Audiophile Feed is built by a long-time audiophile and a personally curated collection of the best audiophile publications from across the web. New articles, reviews, and commentary from over 50 sources, all in one place. Instead of checking a dozen bookmarks every morning, you get a single, clean page with everything that matters.

No ads, no cookies, no account required — just audiophile content.

Descriptions, analysis, and signals across the site are Claude-assisted; all source material links to the original publications.

Discover Music

Beyond the daily feed, Audiophile Feed helps you discover music through the ears of experienced reviewers.

Albums — Critically acclaimed recordings by leading audio and music publications. Each recommendation includes a brief introduction, a link to the original review and links to stream; a shortcut to music praised for both its artistry and its sound.

Tracks — The specific tracks reviewers reach for when evaluating audio equipment. Filter by sound signature (bass, timbre, soundstage, among others) to select reference material for your system. Also a great way to discover music you might never have found otherwise.

Each track links directly to Apple Music and Tidal where available. Qobuz links open the album page rather than the track, as track-level links can vary by region and catalog. The curated playlists on each service aim to mirror the listing, but catalog differences and platform matching mean occasional gaps or mismatches. If a track is missing from a playlist, searching by title and artist is the best fallback.

Why I Built This

For many years, visiting that audiophile news aggregator was part of my daily routine. Then one day the site vanished. It went offline and never came back. I felt like I had lost something familiar and steady. For months I waited, and tried a few alternatives. Nothing matched the comfortable rhythm I had grown used to.

So I decided to rebuild it myself, at first, just for my own use. I recreated the layout and flow I remembered, while updating the design and structure to current standards. The goal was to keep what made the original special.

Now it's ready, and I'm opening the doors.

If you used to visit the old place, you might recognize the familiar arrangement of the publications and articles. I hope the essence still feels right, even with the updates.

It does for me. I have my daily routine back.

Enjoy.

Signals

You may notice small bullseye icons next to some article titles. Each is a quiet signal, a way of highlighting the articles most worth your time.

The signal tier reflects how valuable an article is for a serious audiophile reader deciding what to read next.

  1. Reference
    Exceptional — the kind of depth and originality you'd want in your reference chain.
  2. Studio
    Outstanding — substantial depth and insight, mixed to perfection.
  3. Broadcast
    Notable — solid evaluative content that deserves airtime.

Most articles don't receive a signal, only those that stand out. Signaling is Claude-assisted, analyzing each article's depth, originality, and relevance to the audiophile community.

How It Works

Behind the scenes, Audiophile Feed keeps everything up-to-date and fresh all day long.

  1. 1
    Fresh
    Every four hours, the system gathers any newly published articles from 50 trusted audiophile magazines, blogs, and hi-fi websites.
  2. 2
    No Duplicates
    Before saving anything, new articles get a quick check against what’s already in the collection, mainly by comparing titles to spot anything too similar. If it’s fresh and unique, it’s stored in a database so everything stays organized.
  3. 3
    Simple
    Pages are built instantly from the latest information. They're made with plain, straightforward HTML, CSS and JS. Nothing complicated gets added.
  4. 4
    Quick
    Once ready, each page is sent out to a global network of servers (called a CDN — think of it as copies stored in data centers all around the world). That means no matter where you are, the page loads fast from a server nearby.

Contact & Suggest a Source

Have a publication you think should be included? Found a bug, or just want to say hello? I would love to hear from you.