Need definitions of: Dark; Warm; and Bright


Throughout thousands of postings, the descriptive adjectives of dark, warm, and bright are employed.  What does each of them actually mean?  Are these meanings solely subjective, or can they be seen in displays of frequency responses and distortion across an audio spectrum?
128x128Ag insider logo xs@2xjmeyers
Alas, the technology to create these magical plots is beyond most audiophiles.
This audio vocabulary refer to the modern creation of electronic design audio....It never exist among musician before that ....

Music is not ONLY  pure physical sound, music is an interpreted phenomenon and if a an audio system is defined mainly  by warm and bright audiophile concept, we are in very shallow waters....

Musical sound are not warm nor bright ever....Save if the audio system and the acoustical settings are uncontrolled or badly designed or the 2 at the same time...

A musical instrumental timbre is never bright or warm "per se" save if the system is not appropriately tuned...

Then defining our taste by warm and bright qualification on a "magical plot" or by ears, refer to the same ignorance about neuro-acoustic....and refer to our gear defects  not to musical perception...

Musical sounds are not physical sounds.....
Post removed 
Dark means the sun has set. Warm means that Summer is coming. Bright means you stop looking for word descriptions of what you hear.
@hide45, Robert Hartley? You pick strange people to be your gods.

There are people more qualified to comment on audio matters than an english major. 

As for my answer, it certainly qualifies as more of an answer than what came before it and it was very specific. If you had a bit more knowledge and some decent equipment you could make yourself qualified to make statements on those assertions, maybe your definition of bright is different than mine. Anyone here with the capability can make these frequency adjustments and see if they agree. Maybe they will not and we can talk about it and perhaps come up with better definitions. But you? Just hot air I'm afraid.
I have a question,not to hijack the OPs thread,but how did this thread take a nose dive right in to the ground?