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Whatever you do, do NOT take that electrostatic headphone into the jacuzzi.
I guess they'll be my future since I'll probably end up in assisted living
feel of live music isn't a proper definition of high fidelity.
I have always wanted to go to a live acoustic concert with a few people, who have a control box where they can tweak the bass and treble, just to see what they would do.
Dale you have described my dislike of the headphone experience precisely. It doesn't present the musical spectrum the way the live experience does, in the air and impacting your body.
This does neither good nor bad, the personal taste will tell.Every live music event are different each other too.
If you aren't bothered by the different "sound staging" from cans (some are, some aren't, I'm not) (another big thread on that), then the lower distortion and freedom from room and crossover artifacts pays off big time in SQ. I have heard loudspeakers more than 10 times what my HD650s cost that couldn't touch them. So whatever the "multiplier" would be, I agree that cans use your audio dollar much more efficiently than speakers, and also "keep the peace" when housemates don't want to listen to the same thing you do.
So very true.I have been at homes with very expensive speaker sets but placed in a room with very bad acoustics.
With good headphones you don't have to worry.
Many years ago a major audio magazine surveyed several speaker mfrs asking them what's the best speaker for a given room, or what room would be best for their speakers. And while all but one responded with speaker/room suggestions, Roy Allison of AR said "A good speaker is a good speaker in an auditorium or broom closet."
For acoustic concerts you shouldn't have to reduce the volume. I wouldn't likely go to an acoustic concert just to hear it played over a wall of amps and speakers. Kind of defeats the purpose.