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Don't think this was posted here before ... but I was put onto (somehow!) a really great article in the Jan 2000 Stereophile, by Marcus Sauer - "God is in the Nuances". (I think you can find it by Googling the phrase?)Fascinating comment (37 pages! ) about how basically the emotional experience when listening to music is the key to what is a "good" system. Trouble is ... you can't measure this! I thoroughly recommend it - and it goes to the heart of what Hugh is all about! Regards,Andy.
Quote from: andyr on 12 Jul 2008, 10:13 amDon't think this was posted here before ... but I was put onto (somehow!) a really great article in the Jan 2000 Stereophile, by Marcus Sauer - "God is in the Nuances". (I think you can find it by Googling the phrase?)Fascinating comment (37 pages! ) about how basically the emotional experience when listening to music is the key to what is a "good" system. Trouble is ... you can't measure this! I thoroughly recommend it - and it goes to the heart of what Hugh is all about! Regards,Andy.I have a completely opposite view on this. You the listener may have an emotional experience, but your system does not. If all things are operating perfectly, you the listener may tend to vary, maybe not, in your "persona" every time you listen to music. Your music system will be the same every time unless you make changes within the system.You the listener have emotions. The music system does not.If you have an emotional experience while listening to music, it's all about YOU.It's nice to have an emotional experience while listening, for sure. But I think it's more a measure of you the listener than anything about your music system.
Quote from: andyr on 12 Jul 2008, 10:13 amI have a completely opposite view on this. You the listener may have an emotional experience, but your system does not. If all things are operating perfectly, you the listener may tend to vary, maybe not, in your "persona" every time you listen to music. Your music system will be the same every time unless you make changes within the system.You the listener have emotions. The music system does not.If you have an emotional experience while listening to music, it's all about YOU.It's nice to have an emotional experience while listening, for sure. But I think it's more a measure of you the listener than anything about your music system.
Music is spiritual, which often means that it's personal. And for myself, as long as I've found what stirs me, then it doesn't really matter what the measurements are or if anyone else likes it.
I don't know if this makes any sense, but your system has to get to a certainpoint (and it's different for everyone) where you really are emotionallyengaged and you'd rather sit in your chair or on your couch and listento more music instead of doing something else...That's where the emotional component enters into it for me.
word....another interesting tidbit from Sauer's article was the experiment where despite anesthetizing the auditory portion of the brain (temporal lobe), an effect was still evident in the subjects mood post-music.
The scientist part of me wants to see the methods for their study because something about it doesn't jive with me. The psychologist part of me says, "Aha, there's the evidence".
But, at the same time, there is an intuitive level of plausability....that there are different quadrants of our gnoggin that perform separate but simultaneous functions.
Shouldn't that be knoggin? Anyway, for me there is no direct correlation between the vortex and the apex relative to my mojo meter and my bullshit meter. Mood is everything, gear is fun. And, the devil is in the details.
Of course! An example is in order. At work we have a crappy little stereo CD/AM/FM player. Sometimes something comes on which causes me to either exibit my air guitar skills or dance moves,
Word....as emotive variables go, spontaneous air guitar may on the top of the list
QuoteWord....as emotive variables go, spontaneous air guitar may on the top of the listCertainly, the way we feel at the time has huge bearing on just how our 'systems' appear to be travelling.Cheers,Hugh
For me, the emotional angle is what's most important when listening to music. Being accurate, having a wide and deep soundstage, etc, adds to the music, but in the end, they are just gravy. It's more about the feelings the equipment conveys to me. It's about what moves you, not the specs. And your emotions can be tainted by outside things, like what's going on in your life and how much you paid for the equipment. Being an objective listener rather than a subjective one is fine, but it's not always representative of real life nor most of the time that you spend listening to music.Music is spiritual, which often means that it's personal. And for myself, as long as I've found what stirs me, then it doesn't really matter what the measurements are or if anyone else likes it.
Why can't you have both ?