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You wouldn't put a big piece of foam, fiberglass, hunk of metal or poly in a piano unless you wanted it to sound like the dampener pedal plus some.
It's not hard and doesn't take much to kill the specific musical note or for that note to loose it's distinctive personality. This doesn't only go for the loudspeaker but the components and all the conduits in the audio chains pathway.
I would say 90 percent of my time is removing dampening away from the signal path to open the sound up enough to reproduce a musical note being played by a full range of instruments.
If I have too much dampening in the signal path I will only hear a very squeezed close up view of the instrument with a very small halo that is usually shifted up in pitch or really dulled out.
Can you share the equipment you use with us?
Hi Michael:Can you share the types of speakers used, if not their names, and how you place them in the room and in relation to the listener?Was also wondering what sizes of rooms the systems are in?Thanks, Rocket_Ronny
And I will send you Aqua lung Jethro Tull and if you tell me that my systems fault for this horrible cd you would be instantly discredited because that cd is nothing but trash bug time