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Quotewhile i do not know for sure, i suspect that, when it comes to electronic audio gear, more technically accurate may be less musically neutral. I agree Doug. There is some gear out there, both tube and SS, that can come across as sterile. Depending of course on the associated equipment within the rest of the system. Absolute neutrality does not (cannot) exist as there are far too many variables starting with the recording itself. I think one of the biggest problems with audiophile terms is that everyone has a different perception of what they mean.
while i do not know for sure, i suspect that, when it comes to electronic audio gear, more technically accurate may be less musically neutral.
"Absolute neutrality" is almost antithetical to the reason for using tube amplifiers and preamps in the first place. If you really want neutrality, you will probably be happier with solid state gear.
Quote from: dyohn on 19 Oct 2008, 11:43 pm"Absolute neutrality" is almost antithetical to the reason for using tube amplifiers and preamps in the first place. If you really want neutrality, you will probably be happier with solid state gear.i must respectfully beg to differ w/you here. or, maybe this is where a word or statement means two different things to two different people. as i stated before, this is what it means to me:"...while i do not know for sure, i suspect that, when it comes to electronic audio gear, more technically accurate may be less musically neutral...."i want my audio playback to sound more like real music. tube amplification (and especially tube preamplification) is what gets me closer to that...ymmv,doug s.
Brown, I think you have missed the point. What we are referring to when we are using the term neutral in this thread is striving not to add any colorations or editorial content to the program material in the recording. The original live performance undergoes alteration by the recording process, and it hopefully bears some resemblance to the original event.What we are defining as neutral or High Fidelity reproduction of the original source consists of preserving as much of the information present in the recording as possible in what ever form or color it may have. How the instruments sound may have been altered by the acoustics of the space in which it was played or how the mic used deviates from accuracy in translating the acoustic waveform into an electronic signal is not an issue. Scotty
Well, I guess it depends on your definition of "neutrality." To me, an "absolutely neutral" signal path (which does not exist) introduces nothing to the signal. A theoretical straight wire with gain. In general, valve gear introduces many more (and often unpredictable) signal artifacts than does solid state gear, and while it is undeniable that the even order distortion of valves can make the signal sound more warm and, perhaps, "musical" than an IC, arguing that that is the same as "neutral" is a different use of that term than any I'm familiar with. If valves were "neutral" there would be no point to sports like "tube rolling." BTW, I use and love tube DACs, so it's not like I'm an anti-valve guy, just that I maintain that they are not "neutral."
that is exactly what i was talking about, & what i suspected you mean. i believe that neutral, in an electronic sense means coloured in a musical sense... there is no such thing as "straight wire with gain" on the recording side of the equation. so, even if it were possible to have it on the playback side (which it's not, imo), if you did have the theoretical "straight wire with gain" on the playback side, it's not gonna be musically neutral...doug s.
Hey Doug. Your description above completely alters the term "neutral." Electronic neutrality = accurate and unadulterated signal path from source to loudspeaker. You get whatever the recording engineer chose to put onto the recording with nothing added by the system that is not already there.
Quote from: doug s. on 20 Oct 2008, 05:23 pmthat is exactly what i was talking about, & what i suspected you mean. i believe that neutral, in an electronic sense means coloured in a musical sense... there is no such thing as "straight wire with gain" on the recording side of the equation. so, even if it were possible to have it on the playback side (which it's not, imo), if you did have the theoretical "straight wire with gain" on the playback side, it's not gonna be musically neutral...doug s.Hey Doug. Your description above completely alters the term "neutral." Electronic neutrality = accurate and unadulterated signal path from source to loudspeaker. You get whatever the recording engineer chose to put onto the recording with nothing added by the system that is not already there. This is, of course, almost impossible, and is why we all choose the different systems we all choose. If you (or anyone else) happens to "like" the particular colorations added to or subtracted from the source by the components in your signal chain, then so be it, you LIKE it and it is probably not going the be the same exact thing someone else might "like." But calling something "musically neutral" because you happen to like the way it sounds has about as much meaning as me calling McDonald's sickening because every time I eat there I get the Hershey squirts. We all react differently to input stimuli. The goal of electronic neutrality is for the gear to add as little as possible to the source, so that each user may then adjust and change it to suit their particular set of reactions.And thus I say again: valve gear is not generally neutral. It adds a particular set of colorations that, if you like them, are pleasing to the ear. If you don't like them, they they are not pleasing. But colorations they all do add, and in most cases they are far less neutral than solid state components.
By making a case for adding distortion during the reproduction of the information captured in the original recording you have abandoned the concept of High Fidelity.
Once again there is nothing wrong with a personal preference for a certain type sound associated with added 2nd harmonic distortion.
By adding distortion to the playback of your music you have masked information that was present in the recording. In essence you have added dirt to the window through which you are viewing the performance and decreased the transparency of the system and the amount of low level information you might have heard
Can you prove the assertion that solid state gear is more neutral then tubes? Perhaps the infinite tonal spectrum is not measurable using current technology. Really, even with the absolute top of the line SS gear there are obvious differences in sound quality. Since state of the art SS gear can't achieve consistency then there must be something out there that is not being measured using SOTA lab equipment. Shouldn't all SOTA SS gear sound the same? Perhaps tube gear fills in the "x" factor that SS gear neglects. If you just use measurements as your design criteria then there would be no reason to even listen to the gear before marketing it. Is there a measurement that will predict if an amp will have good holographic qualities which something that tube amps excell? Please inform me what that measurement is.-Roy