Perhaps the most annoying myth in audio of 2025? Talking about Loudness!


It is said far too often that the louder speaker will sound better, even by 1 decibel. I’ve found this statement to be supremely inaccurate. Anyone feels the same way or differently?

I feel the opposite to be true, once the speaker has reached a comfortable level, somewhere around 65-72 decibel, getting louder than that ought to sound worse for me. It usually sounds worse for a number of reason, room acoustic interactions, speaker cabinets, small distortion of drivers, etc.

 

Many years in this hobby has taught me to listen to things like smoothness, clarity, separation, microdynamics. An absolutely huge trait right now for me is how effortless is the sound. If it sounds strained, it’s not good to my ears, and many speakers sound strained to a degree even at average 70 db. After owning electrostats, I find many box speakers to lack the purity that I aim for. It gets worse the louder the box speakers get. 

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Let's do some extremely basic math. If the louder speaker sounds better, even by 1 db, how much louder would Kef Q150 ($300) need to be, to beat the flagship Kef Muon, or even Kef Blade meta?

I prefer electrostats because they can play at ppp levels significantly better than dynamic speakers, which excell at ffff levels.

For a particular speaker/room/ listening spot there is a certain sound level that quickly becomes annoying/abrasive depending on the chosen music. Speakers have the most distortion compared to the rest of the audio chain from source to listener. Peter Walker of Quad was asked if he thought his speaker was perfect. He said no, just that the rest were all so much worse!