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Not so! At heart this is about consumerism - not being taken advantage of by unscrupulous vendors, and not being tricked into paying ten times more than necessary for audio gear. Specs are indeed relevant, and the consumer who understand this will ultimately enjoy a better audio system at a lower price than someone who does not understand.
There is equipment out there that can do it. With every human voice, there is what is known as a formant. It is unique to every individual, as every one has a different size chest cavity, vocal tract, and different vocal chords. You can't disguise it by imitating another voice. And yes, it can be isolated and measured. Cheers
That's all well and good if you assume that all consumers are strict utilitarians and that audio systems are nothing more than a commodity.
Tubes always measure worse than SS and are preferred by many, many people.
John,> If John is singing, you can "hear" that it is him. If George or Paul is singing, then you can "easily" hear the difference. There is no measurement possible to discern between who is singing. <Of course there is! Let's start with what difference can be heard. The main two things that vary between two singers are spectral content, which includes formants (high Q resonances) from the mouth shape, and the way notes swell and decay which is consciously controlled by the singer. One singer may tend to have a harder (faster) attack than another. Why do you think this can't be measured? If I were assigned the task of distinguishing John from Paul without listening, the first thing I'd do is run an FFT on both Wave file samples. When John makes an "ooh" vowel sound the spectrum will be different from the way Paul voices the same vowel. If one singer has an accent the oohs and aahs and ohs might change, but the formants will still be unique and valid.--Ethan
Yes, and it's well known that adding subtle amounts of distortion can be a pleasing effect. But this is an effect, not higher fidelity!
Yeah, I think my gear looks bitchin' cool, dude.
John,> If John is singing, you can "hear" that it is him. If George or Paul is singing, then you can "easily" hear the difference. There is no measurement possible to discern between who is singing. <Of course there is! Let's start with what difference can be heard. The main two things that vary between two singers are spectral content, which includes formants (high Q resonances) from the mouth shape, and the way notes swell and decay which is consciously controlled by the singer. One singer may tend to have a harder (faster) attack than another. Why do you think this can't be measured? If I were assigned the task of distinguishing John from Paul without listening, the first thing I'd do is run an FFT on both Wave file samples. When John makes an "ooh" vowel sound the spectrum will be different from the way Paul voices the same vowel. If one singer has an accent the oohs and aahs and ohs might change, but the formants will still be unique and valid.> Hearing is not simply the act of receiving frequencies, amplitudes, distortions and phase relationships. It is the process of assembling these into the perception of sound. <I agree, but again this is irrelevant in a discussion of the ways that audio gear can alter the quality of electrical signals passing through them and how those changes can be measured.--Ethan
Our ears all have their individual hearing characteristics. How does an audio component designer compensate for all the possible variations in hearing?Raj
NOT IN HIGH END