and 4 of those analog recordings came from MF/AD that are not exactly " honest " about but both must deffend what their mouth talks.
R.
R.
Turntable got absolutely crushed by CD
those kind of adjectives ( that are " audiophiles " adjectives. ) no one can find out in a live music event seated at near field (1m-2m- ) at true live SPLs. @rauliruegas Nonsense. And something of a red herring as well. First, when I hear live un-amplified voices and instruments, one of the first words that come to mind is how rich the sound is. (As I've expressed many times on this forum). Whether I'm playing an instrument myself, or listening to someone else. Secondly, when I attend the symphony, I tend to prefer closer seating and I ABSOLUTELY perceive both the richness of the instruments - richer in terms of fullness, presence and timbrel complexity than typical reproduced sound - and spacious as all get out. No consumer system I've ever heard can even come close to the spacious scale of a live orchestra. Today my main target is not that spaciousness/richness or other sound lovers adjectives but to stay truer to the recording that for me means leave all my room/system generated/developed distortions/ everykind and everywhere at minimum. And those are all "audiophile" targets. You are no more "purer" in your persuit of music than anyone else here. So please don't throw stones in glass houses.
Right...therefore the division you (and some others) make between "sound lovers" and "music lovers" is bogus. One can enjoy both aspects - in fact they are obviously interlinked, given it's sound that we are responding too. If music were only about the notes being played and not the specific characteristics of the sound as well, chosen by the musician, then musicians and audiences wouldn't care if a piece were played on a Stradivarius or a plastic violin from Toys R Us. Bass players, guitarist et all wouldn't put all the care they do in to the particular tone and sound they are going for. Not everyone appreciates or cares about the sound as much as the notes, but musicians do, and it's makes total sense that music lovers could as well. So, again, it just doesn't follow that if someone describes some appreciate for the sonic aspects of the music they have listened to (whether it's the tone of the instruments, or the tone as pleasingly reproduced on the sound system), that they are therefore as you are trying to claim "NOT MUSIC lovers." That's absurd. Look, you have had your own audiophile journey and have come to a set of criteria that please you. That's great, fine. Just don't use your own desires to be judgemental about others, naively putting them in another box as not being a music lover. That is silly, untrue, egotistic and needlessly divisive. |
Dear @prof 1 : """
I tend to prefer closer seating... """ at one two m.? because this is near field I'm talking about. Yes, for you " that's absurd "" or """ silly "" and I respect your opinion. Btw, I'm not making any " judgmental " of you, I don't care about. Facts are only that: facts. Got it? and know don't tell me just that is absurd or what ever you think. Tell me with facts why I'm wrong but before this tell me the distance to the live music source you are seated and next time bring with you a Radio Shack SPL meter and post here what you measured at your seated position. R. |
Hey Prof You took the time to write a nice comprehensive reply to a silly post. You have the patience of a saint. Subjective vs Objective are never given any attention. Absolutes are given in a reality I am not a part of. The reality is you write from a real life experiences in live music, plus sitting in the right spot(could not resist). I guess you can sit in the right spot all your life but never hear the music. It is like the guy singing in the shower with the pitch so far off it changed notes. He is still happy as hell, he can not hear it. I guess musicians are just not suppose to bring their ears to party. Only people who sit in a certain row. The bassoon playing right next to you does not count. Well it is nice to see someone else who really cares about how real music sounds and feels. Enjoy the ride Tom |
geoffkait No, no, no. Some high end audiophile systems bring out the finest qualities of sound from all sources, including the worst sources. Sure, I’ve trashed many recordings LP, 78 and CD based on really poor sound quality. Now, my system is so good that it elevates the sound of once were mediocre recordings/masterings. An example is last weeks review in Positive Feedback Magazine of a phono stage where the reviewer extols the virtues of the TimeLife Angel/EMI classical recordings box sets, available at $1 to $3 per LP. When I purchased 9 sets for $9 30+ years ago, my system stunk compared to now despite the Acoustat 2&2s driven by Dynaco IIIs, a VPI 19-4 and SME IV, Dynavector Karat. Those LPs sounded generally compressed and bright, lacking bsss and dynamics. Well, yes, those LPs were not necessarily from master tapes but the vinyl was quiet. Today, on my superior equipment with all the tweaks for isolation of equipment, electrical/cabling superiority and acoustic room superiority, those same LPs can have very good sound, eminently listenable. The Walton/Shostokovich LP is really good. Sure, I’d rather have the EMI originals but at 25 cents per LP cost, they were a bargain that I didn’t recognize until 30 years later when I played them again on the recommendation of a reviewer. |