Head, Heart, Gut - a theory of audiophiles
OK, its already a cliche that "we all hear differently" as a means of explaining why we have different preferences
in sound. I don't think that's enough, just to say we hear differently or that we have different preferences. I'd
like to dive a little deeper into preferences and how basic orientations influence our perceptions of audio gear (and music).
Where do you "Hear"
One of the most interesting theories I've heard in a while is specific to music and why certain music appeals to certain people and not to others. The basic idea is that we each have different centers, and based on those centers, we react differently to different music.
For example, a "Gut" person prefers music that is primal, rhythmically driven, and something that is felt "in the gut".
A "Heart" person is someone that really connects with the emotional, heart-on-the-sleeve aspect of some music.
Finally, a "Head" person is someone who not only hears music, but stives to understand the meaning and theory behind it.
One interesting aspect is that these are not hard and fast rules, as people will vascilate between each of the 3. So, I know that I am more of a head person than anything else, but I veer frequently into the gut area, and rarely into the heart aspect. This influences my choices in music to a large extent.
Applying the Head-Heart-Gut theory to Audiophilia
I would put forward that this is also applicable to our audio preferences. I think "heart" people are more likely to love tubed equipment, with it's euphonic presentation and (ahem) emotional truth. For gut people, it's equipment like krell - larger than life, driven, technicolor. For "Head" people, it's Spectron - clear, articulate, transparent, super-detailed.
Of course, like with music, there's no single hard and fast rule, and audiophiles vascilate between the various types. I remain a Head-Gut person in this area.
So, that's my theory, I'd love to hear what you think you are and why!