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The high frequency area of the cochlea is often damaged by loud sound. Sound pressure is measured in decibels (dB). ... With extended exposure, noises that reach a decibel level of 85 can cause permanent damage to the hair cells in the inner ear, leading to hearing loss. Many common sounds may be louder than you think…
At 92 db, you will lose your hearing over time. A local high school band music director admits he has lost a lot of his. And he was never around any electronic music.80-85db peaks would be a lot safer. I listen a lot at 70-75 peaks. You only get one set of ears.
The high school band teacher was only around live musical instruments, none of the other.I wish you luck.
Anyone is free to do whatever they want with their own ears..I have to say folks get used to a level of loudness. And lower than that always sounds too quiet. This is a learned thing. If you want to listen at lower levels, just do it! And after a week or two that lower level WILL sound 'right'
This may help and is relevant in a couple aspects to your question....https://www.psaudio.com/podcast/are-there-preferred-volume-levels-for-amps/
.... most recordings have an ideal playback volume.
BTO is a great rock band very underrated much better than Grand Funk or Aerosmith.