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Sure I believe it. These guys know their electronics very well. But what I don't believe is that an infinitesimal improvement in electrical performance, that you have to sit around and concentrate on to hear means jack squat in the larger scheme. Nor do I believe that a 5% improvement is worth an ungodly large price markup, as is the case with most of these $300+ cables. A lot of folks are laughing all the way to the bank I am sure. Sooo....the physics of electronics pertain ONLY when listening to lite jazz? If you put on a rock CD magically these factors of capacitance, inductance and resistance etc. just fly right out the window? Hmmm, well that is VERY interesting! Kind of a self-fulfilling prophecy is it not? You can only hear minute differences in music you LIKE? Boy, could that possibly mean that it's the MUSIC that matters, not the equipment? Put on a Limp Bizkit record in the most expensive, technically perfect system ever built and I will still hate it. Jerry didn't like the Cathedral track I played him because he doesn't like the music, so why should he even care about looking for differences? Who could blame him? Likewise I could not much care if a guy going "tzz" sounded like he was 4 feet or 3 feet to the left of me. If you claim to be able to hear differences in cables then it is fair to assume that you will also be able to hear if said cable is connected to a switchbox or not, right? Or that cable A still sounds different than cable B when you factor in the tone of the switchbox. Likewise I would imagine that you would be able to hear the difference if a single resistor or capacitor was swapped out in the component. If a two foot stretch of copper is auidbly different than another two foot stretch of copper, then you're asking me to believe you could hear any number of vanishingly small changes in the entire playback chain. But I cannot deny with any certainty what anyone claims they can or cannot hear, I just find it a bit silly to say you CAN hear a difference between A and B but just by themselves, but NOT if factor C is involved. If a switchbox is going to be so awfully corrupting to the sound then wouldn't each inch of wire also make a difference? Could you hear the difference between an 8 foot and a 16 foot cable? There's probably enough metal in the 16 footer to account for what's in the switchbox. Sitting around and listening to "differences" wether real or imagined, is largely a waste of time in my opinion. If you don't like what you're listening to in the first place then all the rest is pointless. If a person is only playing a certain CD to hear special effects or to analyze how each little sound byte is rendered by their system, that to me sounds about as much fun as watching paint dry. I think disillusionment with a particular album's music over time gives rise to this analytical nonsense. Obviously the song is no longer moving your emotions if you're listening for the half a millisecond attack of the guitar string or whatever. Jerry's setup always sounded great each time I heard it because of macro differences; it's all good gear. I couldn't really care less wether ACME or Furshlugginer Brand cables were used. It would still sound good. I heard bigger differences when we changed speakers, but I couldn't hear any meaningful improvement with cables. And I would never pay more for a cable than I did for speakers! I'm not trying to ream anyone a new asshole here, (just giving audiojerry a hard time, mostly! ) I just think it's too easy to get carried away with this stuff. It's kinda like walking around with microscopes taped to your eyeballs. What we really SHOULD be doing is bitching at the record labels about making more natural-sounding recordings with less close-miking techniques. Don't gate out every background noise. Use less compression. Don't EQ the drums so much. The recordings are what really matter, less so what we're using to play them on. Not surprisingly, the records I always thought had a good recording back when I had compartively crappy equipment have still shown themselves to be good now that I have comparatively better gear. You can get the notion of recording quality even through a cheap boombox. Great music is more powerful than any bit of electronic gadgets you can come up with - it will bore through cheap equipment like a blind mole and still move you. Obviously it's even better if the playback chain sounds great! But after while you've gotta ask yourself, what's the point in listening with an "ear loupe"?
Likewise I could not much care if a guy going "tzz" sounded like he was 4 feet or 3 feet to the left of me.
Jerry's setup always sounded great each time I heard it because of macro differences; it's all good gear. I couldn't really care less wether ACME or Furshlugginer Brand cables were used. It would still sound good. I heard bigger differences when we changed speakers, but I couldn't hear any meaningful improvement with cables.
These questions from DVV were prompted from Nathan's earlier post on switchboxes. Nathan, I hope you don't mind, but I copied it here, because I think it is very provocative and worthy of lots of healthy discussion.
Taken out of context, it does seem a bit ridiculous to care about such a silly detail in a recording, but I believe getting this type of detail right is demonstrative of the playback ability of your system. Taken in context, these types of minute details are needed to capture the nuance of the the musical event. Nathan, you said it yourself that much music is ruined by close miking and other bad recording techniques. But when a recording is done right, there is so much more that can be experienced if your system allows you to do it. Take someone who loves poetry. A poetry lover can read the same passage dozens of times, and extract new meaning and new pleasure every time he reads it. Music can be appreciated in a similar way, and my love of music drives me to want to hear each musician's technique and the subtle things he is doing, and how he is commincating with the other musicians, and how they are playing together to create an intricate tapestry that can be enjoyed even more deeply when your system allows you to examine that tapestry in all its detail and glory. So, I admit to pursuing gear, but not for the gear itself, but for how it helps me connect more closely to my music.
Thank you for the compliment, but I believe my system sounds the way it does because every component plays a role, some bigger than others, including my power cords, my Shakti stones, and my Aurios Isolation Bearings - even something as seemingly insignificant as my connectors. Ask Wayne and others about the Bullet Plugs. You can't build a great sounding system without being analytical at times and paying attention to the details. I believe Nathan is becoming guilty of this himself. All the little subtle differences add up to the macro differences that you can hear from one system to the next.
I've got lots more to say, but not enough time to say it right now, but thank you Nate and DVV for stirring the pot.
"Do we buy hardware and limit our enjoyment to ever searching for better components, or do we use it as a means to get to the music?"?
you can enjoy music if it's on a $20 boom box or a $100,000 rig, becuase it goes back to listening to the music for what it is. BUT there is no such thing as the best system, becuase here's how I see it, let's say you are listening to the best sound system ever made, call it system X, so your playing your favorite music on system X, wow it's great and all, but then you say you want better bass, so you get better bass, but now it's not system X anymore, it's system XB (B for bass) but now you want even better bass, so now that system is XBB (BB for better bass) so your listening, and like wow this is great, but I want a wider sound stage, so now our system is XBBS (S for sound) get the point? it will just keep on expanding and expanding
"Why is it automatically assumed that bigger price means better audio?"that goes for anything. more expensive car=faster, more expensive computer=faster/do more things, more expensive camera=better pictures, more expensive plane= move people more efficently etc...
Why do we have audio, to listen to music, or to listen to components?
QuoteWhy do we have audio, to listen to music, or to listen to components? What's wrong with doing both?
my advice is to get a good set of headphones
What's wrong with doing both?It's a hobby, if you ask me people are entitled to get out of it whatever they want! If that means buying stuff purely for the purpose of impressing the chicks... well it's not my gig but good luck to them is what I say
The danger is, of course, that the process becomes the goal, and you end up a "gearhead". For those of you that are already gearheads, my advice is to get a good set of headphones and forget about your system for a while, just re-connect to the music. . .
You buy a Ford Taurus to get around.......You buy a Ferrari to get around. The Ferrrari may bring additional enjoyment and satisfaction to it's driver. No one is being forced to buy anything. Get what YOU want.Drive a Chevy, listen to a Kenwood. Drive a BMW, listen to an Odyssey.As long as you are enjoying yourself and not hurting anyone what's the problem?