“If subwoofers and main speakers are integrated correctly there is no reason to turn the subs up or down with any genre of music. A system that is tuned correctly does not care what genre you are playing. When I use the term , system I include the room in that category.
Most audiophiles are ball parking it with their ears which are extremely poor calibration devices. There is no substitute for measurement.”
I agree re: subs gain when correctly* implemented. With both music and movie reproduction I never change subs gain as it sits where it’s supposed to for overall balance, although I can understand if some would want to go bonkers with the subs gain lever to suit a particular mood and/or occasion.
With regard to measurements, they’re certainly indispensable in many regards and as an outset at least with some parameters, but to me it always comes down to fine tuning per ears as a last tweaking measure - if not in all aspects.
My (limited) experience agrees with properly aligned bass being largely equitable across music genres, @phusis @mijostyn , but I found subs with considerable room gain become less predictable according to how a given track/album was mastered - variation in bass gain seems extreme for certain album versions. Specifically: this variation (in bass gain) does not seem to scale with genre, rather, it seems aligned with specific masters / remasters, some albums / versions having very low bass levels and others (at the same subs’ level) being far too high and exciting room modes that are not heard on other versions. This seems independent of overall SPL for the whole audible frequency spectrum, I should note - i.e., it doesn’t seem to be simply because some albums / versions are simply mastered louder overall. I could make up a rule that it seems more pronounced in stuff mastered for OST’s or something like that, but trying to ascribe a pattern would probably just be misleading and pointless.
Measurements and by-ear-fine-tuning both suggest things are good in my present setup (at least within the system-incl.-room constraints), but the level dials on my subs’ plates still get exercise almost every listening session for favored tracks with extremes in bass gain (I already know where the dials belong based on past tuning exercises).
This tendency is pronounced enough that I’ve considered getting a Goldpoint passive attenuator or similar device from which to run my subs - reduce the # level dials to turn by 50%, but I’ve concern over running the inbuilt plate amps on high level (downstream of a passive attenuator) for each listening session. Thoughts?