There are some very well understood rules about listening to music with hearing aids. You can easily find them if you Google, but the ones I remember off-hand are:
Use a specific music program on your hearing aid.
In that program:
- you need feedback suppression to either be off or set to a specific music setting or at least set to the minimum that prevents feedback.
2.Turn off any frequency compression, frequency shifting or “sound recover” type of technology.
3.Turn up the MPO settings.
4.Keep the level compression as low as you can, but obviously avoid clipping.
5.Turn off noise suppression, noise limiting, wind noise suppression and other such things.
Listening with just one ear, are there noises that sound particularly prominent? If so you could ask for those frequencies to be reduced a bit. Do the same with the other ear.
I find that you can massively improve things by doing this. There is no reason why the settings for music should be the same as the ones for general conversation.
Also lastly some hearing aids work much better for music than others. I like my current Resound Ones, but no doubt others here can tell you others that work well for them.
It’s true that hearing aids can never give you back the quality of sound you have before you needed hearing aids. But you certainly can get to a place where you can still enjoy music. It needs some work though.