It is probably possible, but when talking with people for several decades, the things they love the most, are the ones they needed to learn to love.
This may be partly phenomena of old days: You got your first recording of something, which was almost intolerable. It may be like hearing death metal for the first time, after AC/DC being hardest thing you ever heard. Or it may be hearing grindcore after you thought Metallica was brutal. First it is amazement of what the fuck is this, how can someone listen to this? Some sort of curiosity combined to the fact that you simply have no options. You got 1 new tape or one new LP that you got, rest is the old things you've been listening all year. So, listening first, not getting what it is. Soon listening out of curiosity, then being sort of enlightened, and eventually, album you listened few times a day, even when you didn't like it, became best thing you ever heard.
I think in current era, it is unlikely you'd give album a chance to impress you. You want to love at first listen. Many want pre-view to have appetizer to decide do they even bother. A lot of releases don't really reveal themselves in 60 minutes sample or quick skipping. And is that love, anyways? Perhaps more like dating app of noise, hah. You just randomly skip and try out, but the noise you absolutely love, you love including with its mistakes and clumsy and awkward qualities included? Things that generally were reasons why you skipped getting release when sample didn't deliver instant gratification.