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You leave alot of questions. If there are Many dimensions of "truth", then the vast majority would not prefer your interpretation, or any reviewer's interpretation. So why have any reviewers? We don't need you. So why shoot yourself into extinction so to speak?Having so many "truths" opens up some dangers. First it would give an unscrupulous individual or reviewer the option of manipulating definitions/descriptions etc to suite his goals. (We have already seen definition changes in some manufacturer's ads. Always for someone's advantage and minipulate the perception to those purchasers.) One may sit anywhere in the audience and receive his individual dose of reality, or "truth", the positioned microphone only allows one version of the "truth" at best, unless one is able to move the mic to one's sitting position. As one moves and sits farther away from the mic, the spacial cues etc changes. This cannot be duplicated by changing the tonal balance of the audio system. So one is creating his own music. It may be to his liking, which is fine, but it is not the "truth" compared to where he would be sitting in the actual venue. One might say, the recording from the mic is not accurate either. Should we stray farther away? Or, why not continue to work towards more truly accurate recordings and reproduction? We should not stop imo.Having many "truths" allows one to comment his position/belief in one post/string/forum and then state an entirely different position/belief on another post/string/forum to fit the audience. Having multiple "truths" allows one an "escape" excuse while slyly desparaging one product and promoting another. How do we know which is truly superior? Any questions, hey it is just my version of the "truth". This is one of the very ways a shill/scam artists work. I would veare away from that model to be safe.Another result is that the rogue reviewer can change the perception of a product by simple phrase minipulation(s); therefore enhancing sales. Very subtly of course. On the contrare, with so many 'truths" how can one desparage any product or give any recommendation? Anyway, no one could effectively communicate a description when "truth" has so many meanings.Of course, the real life music experience involves all the possible attributes, tonal balance, attack and decay times, dynamics, transparency, soundstaging etc in their proper relationships.I hope this gets some thinking more deeply and the ramifications involved.
Gordon's views are valid within the realm of classical music. His model of what audio reproduction should be does not extend to the creative art of making records with anything beyond a stereo pair hanging over the orchestra. If you only dig 2-channel orchestra recordings and focus solely on your own hearing whilst blocking out all the other stimuli that comes with live music then yeah, maybe you can pursue the high-fidelity angle and trick yourself into thinking you're at the performance and not in front of your stereo with your eyes closed. Still, if live music is so great, the reference which we must worship, then GO TO SEE LIVE MUSIC. Sitting at home listening to records will never ever be the same as seeing a live band and I think everyone knows this, accepts this and enjoys this disparity greatly. They are apples and oranges, one cannot BE the other. And the only way you can really judge this is if you are listening to a recording made at the same performance you just attended yourself. Better yet, if you made the recording yourself. How many people does this apply to?It's also a mistake to think that playback equipment, if designed to some unattainable level of perfection, will be the difference between realistic and unrealistic sound. The audiophile cannot control the recording process, he only controls the playback. It's only part of the total equation. The audiophile can only do so much. Besides, most recordings are not designed to have aural cues which suggest a real-time performance in an external space, they are designed to be an internal, personal experience. They're recording a song, an idea, a feeling, not the performance played at the ACME Music Shack on July 8th in Chicago. Our brains happily fill in the rest.I'd point fingers at the recording biz instead, who quite often produce overly artificial-sounding music with no natural reverb or interesting spatial cues. But of course this is just a subjective style, a creative choice, not a standard to emulate. And again, it's not something the listener can control on a recording that's already been made.
Quote from: sunshinedawg on 15 Nov 2007, 02:33 amHe's pretty much right on, see my post hereI don't understand how people have been in this hobby for years and years and they don't have a basic understanding of how to reproduce the sound field of a live event. You don't get it done with $10,000 power cords etc. You achieve it by studying acoustics and how the human brain/ear system operates. Then, you use system setups that can imitate the sound of a live acoustic hall as closely as possible. Two channel 2D equilateral systems can never come close to sounding like a 3D performance and they sound so boring to me.I'm just guessing, but it would seem like if you really wanted to kill off audio as a hobby for good and all, you'd wean companies off of building 2-channel systems and try to move everybody into highly specialized & complicated "system setups that can imitate the sound of a live acoustic hall as closely as possible."Not that I have anything against the concept, but there's a beauty of simplicity about 2-channel audio...and it can sound darn good. Good enough for most people, and deep enough for real enthusiasts to explore with a lot of satisfaction. So keep shooting for the ideal, but don't throw the baby out with the bath water -- I doubt there is the consumer base to sustain it. I.e., what kind of a room do I need for this ideal recreation of a 3D performance? And what about all the recordings that aren't compatible with it? Most of the good music has been recorded already, in stereo, don't forget.
He's pretty much right on, see my post hereI don't understand how people have been in this hobby for years and years and they don't have a basic understanding of how to reproduce the sound field of a live event. You don't get it done with $10,000 power cords etc. You achieve it by studying acoustics and how the human brain/ear system operates. Then, you use system setups that can imitate the sound of a live acoustic hall as closely as possible. Two channel 2D equilateral systems can never come close to sounding like a 3D performance and they sound so boring to me.
There is no ultimate truth aside from the real thing. And thus the circle would seem to be closed. Do continue though . . .
This is one stupid, endless, time-consuming hobby we're involved with, no?I've boiled it down to fairly simple elements now.....when I turn on my system and I like what I hear, I leave it. If something sounds off, I tinker (without spending serious dough) until it sounds good again What's right is what makes you happy - and that changes thru the years with age, and subjectivity. If your happy no matter what your doing to your system - then either you need to try a bit harder or your system is not the source of your unhappiness - something other in your life is. I shelved my whole system for 6 years and listened to a Panasonic boombox 1993-2000 because I knew what a distraction 'audio' was for me and I needed that time to establish my business(es) and family. It was time well spent - I don't have unhappy moments of that timeframe. I'm now co-exiting peacefully in my life, with music around, once again 7 years later It feels great to have balance - may many of you afflicted as I was make peace with your system soon John