mahgister,
In the chaos of cables mess in a studio, all the subtle "cues" of the
changing sound are lost, and cancelled constantly one another, minutes
after minutes...A tangle knot of cables moving will maintain a general
figure of sound that will not be disturbing, like ONE cable in a
peculiar environment, where the same ears lived alone and attentive to
the subtle details....And these " subtle" changes are not always
measurable, and if they are, in some private room, it will be difficult
to summon the expertise necessary to do it in the exact same condition
at another times... Ok I will silence myself …. My best to all...
Well, that's a whole lot of conjecture or assertions.
Any actual evidence for them? Do you have much experience actually working in pro sound?
Again...look at the type of claims being made for moving cables by the OP of drastic audio changes from moving a cable, including loss of bass, dynamics, highs. You really think if this phenomenon were common that people recording/mixing in studios wouldn't have noticed?
A mixer/recordist works very intently on the sound he's getting, often changing little things for very subtle effects, be it microphones, mic positions, or adjusting EQ etc. If a cable merely moving actually altered the highs/bass/dynamics to the significant degree claimed by the OP, that would be heard! It would necessitate for instance ADJUSTING EQ settings to compensate "damn, I'd spent all that time getting it sounding precisely how I wanted, but now the sound has changed and I have to start again!"
This DOES NOT HAPPEN (in any situation I've ever heard about) which is why it's the provenance of subjectivist audiophiles, but not professionals who spend their careers in sound.
In my daily job doing sound design I am adjusting mix levels and often EQ of many tracks combined (for a given movie scene I may have, say, 6 - 10 stereo tracks, and 12 mono tracks...sometimes many more! - that I'm carefully mixing so the addition of one sound *just barely* alters the whole combination. I have to sometimes move cables and this never results in the sonic changes mentioned by the OP, or anything that changes the very careful, subtle mixing I achieved).
Which is just what would be expected. Unless the cables in question were insufficient for the job or somehow defective enough to screw up the sound if moved. (Which is certainly an issue: rule one when having sound problems is usually "check your cables." But that is for significantly audible defects brought on by some failure in the wiring, not the phenomenon claimed by the "cable lifers" here).