I'm 87 and I thought that my days of listening to classical music (which I've done most of my life) were coming to an end as the higher frequencies became harder and harder to hear and music became a rather lifeless and dull thing.
Recently I was advised to try a set of new hearing aids which can "restore the highs" and I did. After very patient fitting and adjusting by an excellent doctor of audiology (and $6000) I was fitted with hearing aids which did a fairly good job of restoring something approaching a real concert hall. Life in a condo means headphones and a set of Sennheiser 800's worked nicely. Recently I splurged for the new Audeze 3s (easily the best headphones I have ever used), but they are big and heavy and inevitably pressed in on the hearing aids something fierce. After about thirty minutes I had to remove the headphones and was very reluctantly planning to return them when that wonderful "moment of enlightenment) hit.
Question: why can expensive hearing aids help me hear higher frequencies? Answer: because they accentuate the higher frequencies
much like an equalizer. But, of course, Media Center has one graphics and two (count em) parametric equalizers. If hearing aids can accentuate the highs, so can Media Center. Off with the hearing aids, back to the Audeze, a great deal of experimentation (including learning to use a parametric equalizer--sort of) and my first pretty awful results have become a balanced response, much better than the hearing aids could achieve (no feedback problems, no little shrill whistles). The music would be pretty awful for someone with normal hearing, but for me it is a dream come true. Switching the equalizer on and off makes it very clear what a tremendous difference it makes. My days of pretending I'm sitting in Carnegie Hall again are not over.
So hearing loss may not mean that the enjoyment of music is gone. And you don't need a megabuck set of hearing aids. Media Center will do the job just fine. Thanks. Guy