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I've always thought that those audiophiles who listen for every single bit of information on the disc are missing the point.
Quote from: Ericus Rex on 13 Jul 2008, 10:18 pmI've always thought that those audiophiles who listen for every single bit of information on the disc are missing the point.I agree....but one question that comes to mind is is not simply what "experience" we are after when listening but the associated "perception" of how things should sound. Sauer made the point, and it is a good one, that sound engineering exerts a tremendous influence on the sonic outcome of a disc, LP, and how this does not necessarily line up with the reality of the live event. He used the example of an orchestral recording. Multi-source miking does not replicate the sound the concert goer heard in the actual hall. So, that begs the question of how good our sonic memories are for the actual live music....
I agree....but one question that comes to mind is is not simply what "experience" we are after when listening but the associated "perception" of how things should sound. Sauer made the point, and it is a good one, that sound engineering exerts a tremendous influence on the sonic outcome of a disc, LP, and how this does not necessarily line up with the reality of the live event. He used the example of an orchestral recording. Multi-source miking does not replicate the sound the concert goer heard in the actual hall. So, that begs the question of how good our sonic memories are for the actual live music....
...When I first started out in this hobby it was all about the music for me. Along the way, it started to become more and more about the gear and trying to constantly "improve"...to wring every little detail, nuance, etc... While this used to work for me, it no longer pushes my buttons like it once did. Now I just want to listen and enjoy the music again. If the system isn't SOA, I am ok with that. ...
Live music is always ultra high resolution.
Quote from: stvnharr on 16 Jul 2008, 04:22 amLive music is always ultra high resolution. Yes, I guess you could actually say that the live performance is actually MAXIMUM resolution and recording and playback equipment simply tries to capture as much of it as possible. What I actually meant was that I find it more musical and enjoyable to lose a little resolution/detail than to lose tonality and body. Systems that are immediately impressive with ultra high levels of detail are often fatiguing in the long run as the detail is unnaturally highlighted as a result of inferior tonality and body ... ie. less body seems to thin out the performance a little thereby unnaturally emphasizing leading edges and detail. This can be impressive and give a real WOW factor but is, to my ears, more "thin" and "up tight" than the live performance and shifts some emphasis away from the body of stringed instruments and toward the strings themselves.
I often get the feeling from reading things here that nobody ever listens to live music.
Yes, I guess you could actually say that the live performance is actually MAXIMUM resolution and recording and playback equipment simply tries to capture as much of it as possible. What I actually meant was that I find it more musical and enjoyable to lose a little resolution/detail than to lose tonality and body.