"am sure most of us have heard records on our systems which are almost unlistenable or certainly unpleasant and we have simply placed these discs in the 'never to played' shelf of our storage unit?"
One of my goals in upgrading is to minimize disks that fall into this category. If a system makes the lesser recordings sound presentable, then there is a good chance the recordings that already sound good will sound even better.
I've found this strategy works better in that these kinds of improvements are less subjective...you know them when you hear them whereas tweaking using the current best sounding recording (to you on your current system) can often become a more subjective exercise in which inherently really good sound happens to appeal to you.
Assuming a recording itself is not damaged or defective, I've discovered that when a recording actually sounds "bad" or fatiguing, as opposed to enjoyable to listen to, it is often due to shortcoming in the playback system. There are few if any cases I can think of currently where even a lesser recording is not enjoyable to listen to assuming an enjoyable performance to start with.
BTW, I agree also that "Pines of Rome" well recorded is an extremely challenging piece for systems to make listenable I have found over the years, hence a good "test" piece. Its a piece that has a lot of complex things going on in the high end that it seems lesser systems can not sort out well, with strident sounding results.
One of my goals in upgrading is to minimize disks that fall into this category. If a system makes the lesser recordings sound presentable, then there is a good chance the recordings that already sound good will sound even better.
I've found this strategy works better in that these kinds of improvements are less subjective...you know them when you hear them whereas tweaking using the current best sounding recording (to you on your current system) can often become a more subjective exercise in which inherently really good sound happens to appeal to you.
Assuming a recording itself is not damaged or defective, I've discovered that when a recording actually sounds "bad" or fatiguing, as opposed to enjoyable to listen to, it is often due to shortcoming in the playback system. There are few if any cases I can think of currently where even a lesser recording is not enjoyable to listen to assuming an enjoyable performance to start with.
BTW, I agree also that "Pines of Rome" well recorded is an extremely challenging piece for systems to make listenable I have found over the years, hence a good "test" piece. Its a piece that has a lot of complex things going on in the high end that it seems lesser systems can not sort out well, with strident sounding results.