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Speakers are generally miles from transparency
John, I think we have to look beyond the powerful bandaid/speaker design aid that digital processing represents, to the fidelity to the original signal that the raw driver is capable of reproducing. The mechanical means we use for creating an acoustic reproduction of the information contained in a recording is far from perfect and still needs a lot work. The way it stands right now no one is fooled into mistaking a reproduction of reality for the real event.
Until someone sucessfully tackles the problem of transient dynamic nonlinearity in loudspeakers and the rest of the recording and reproduction chain, reality will remain an illusive goal for people wishing to recreate it.
I also think you should amend the statementQuote:Speakers are generally miles from transparencyto read "many speakers are generally miles from transparency" there are a few that make a good attempt at being transparent.
The problem is of course that they are frequently executed for bearing the bearers of bad tidings. The speaker is almost always blamed for a problem that exists upstream of it if it very transparent. I myself am always on the lookout for a higher fidelity driver.
This means that you will frequently know more about the decisions made in the recording studio by the engineer or producer than you may want to.