As has been pointedly pointed out, live music is the reference for all things audio. Hopefully, during the recording process that live reference is adhered to.
Once the recording is made, it becomes, de facto, the only reference we have.
Keeping that in mind, that recording can only sound so good and all your hifi stereo has to do is faithfully reproduce what the recording engineers had in mind.
It's sad that we are prisoners to the whims of engineers and market forces, limiting the potential that lies in that CD, LP or download.
I don't think we give our stereo systems enough credit for what they do. We constantly upgrade, fiddle and tweak and it brings to mind what the dragon sees when it's chasing its tail: a fleeting image, a moving target that looks different every time he turns his head around.
All the best,
Nonoise
Once the recording is made, it becomes, de facto, the only reference we have.
Keeping that in mind, that recording can only sound so good and all your hifi stereo has to do is faithfully reproduce what the recording engineers had in mind.
It's sad that we are prisoners to the whims of engineers and market forces, limiting the potential that lies in that CD, LP or download.
I don't think we give our stereo systems enough credit for what they do. We constantly upgrade, fiddle and tweak and it brings to mind what the dragon sees when it's chasing its tail: a fleeting image, a moving target that looks different every time he turns his head around.
All the best,
Nonoise