In many hobbies and professions, especially when these are carefully guarded by online forums and their dignitaries, you often find advice towards beginners to start with some crappy cheap gear and then "earn" your way up into the circles of enlightenment and expensive kit.
You can do that or start with a Steinway and just focus on your technique instead of having it CLAd at Joey's Bargain Basement Piano Parlour, starter strings included.
From "Leica Lenses for Normal People":
"
When I was growing up, a guy I knew got himself a Lexus sports car. I don’t know what model. It doesn’t actually matter to this story. When I saw the car, the conversation went something like this:
Mid life crisis dude: Sick car right?
Me: Why didn’t you get the Porsche?
Mid life crisis dude: This car has a backseat and is convertible.
Me: It isn’t a Porsche
Mid life crisis dude: The maintenance is lower for the Lexus, the ride is better, there is a Lexus dealer here in town, and it is also brand new.
Me: It isn’t a Porsche.
Mid life crisis dude: It costs $20K less.
Me: It isn’t a Porsche?
This anecdote suggests that there are people in this life who may or may not be having a mid-life crisis and decide to drive a Lexus sports car. There are others who drive a Porsche. Lexus people are practical and care about features. Porsche people understand features but they know that with some things in life features, price, etc., take a backseat and, when it is all said and done, it is all really about “the show.”
Nobody is going to care about your features and logical decision when you drive down the street in that understated Lexus. Heads will, however, turn when your Porsche comes rolling down the street.
The Hasselblad CVF II 50c is the Porsche in this story."
And:
"
For Leica enthusiasts, using a Leica camera to make pictures isn’t the point either. Therefore, when Leica critics say things like “the images from my Canon R5 are as good as a Leica” or “My Sony G master lens is as good as a Leica Summicron” those statements don’t make sense because they miss the point of shooting with a Leica camera.
For Leica owners, the pictures, image quality, feature set, etc. are only a starting point for discussion. Image quality and functionality are important but not the metric for success.
(...)
In my experience, the Leica camera is often part of the show and it doesn’t matter if your Fuji can make a similar picture for 1/4 the price. I know with 100% certainty that I can make approximately the same images with a Minolta Dynax 5 as I can with my M7 but nobody in their right mind wants to play cameras and lenses with a Dynax 5. The pictures might be nearly the same but the experience is different and THAT is the point."
You are welcome.