Auditioning Audio Gear - The Music Used


We have our usual stack, that we take with us or pull out when we have something new here. Some would even fall into Cornfedboy's confession thread :-)
What music and why do you use when auditioning audio gear? Do you use different music for different components?
angela100
I would say things that you are most familar with that are good "pressings" /old vinyl term. I ain't into this--these speakers/this amp/ are best on that/ kind of music. Female vocal/piano/dynamics would be the things I'm looking for.If I have to strain to hard / it ain't there,and I sure ain't paying for this whatever. I do my best at home, within the confines of my own system/environment.I can never figure out what 'is' the room; or what 'is' the cables or the other equipment I'm listening to at the showroom.Isolated I can tell you what the piece is or isn't doing within my system.
Hi Angela 100, before I pull out my best recordings, I like to use the various artists discs. These recordings sonics range from excellent to poor. If a disc of average sonics is unlistenable I usually will reject this speaker or component. Most of the music I listen to is not recorded that well. An example is a disc I bought at Starbucks called Songs of the Siren. It has 15 cuts of Jazz, country, pop and Blues with each cut recorded differently. If I like what I hear with these type of discs then I will continue on with the audition and start pulling out my good stuff. I do this because most of the equipment will sound good with the best recordings. There seem to be a fine line. Great thread Angela 100.
as with most folks here, i begin equipment auditions with recordings of male and female voices. my selections change over time, mainly 'cause i eventually get bored with "test" cd's/lp's. for several years i used jennifer warnes' "famous blue raincoat" as a primary test lp (i actually bought out a record store's sale stock of this recording; still have 4 or 5 sealed copies). presently, i'm using the persuasion's "might as well" (covers of the dead) and "frankly acapella" (covers of frank zappa). i also favor the fairfield four, "standing in the safety zone" and "the unaccompanied voice" on the secretly canadian label. all of these acapella recordings help me establish the "character" of the equipment i'm auditioning and lay a foundation for other tests. bass response is generally tested using the "poem of chinese drums" track on the burmester sampler "vorfurings cd III" (the u has an umlaut, which i can't insert with a-gon's text creator). rythym and pace are first heard with the "stimela" track from hugh masekela's "hope" (which is also on the burmester cdIII). after listening to these bits, i usually switch to some cd's or lp's that i just plain enjoy. among those i've just pulled out of my "test cd container" (one of those neat little bags from starbucks) are: lou reed "new york"; music from "steal this movie" ; "dead man walking," music inpired by the motion picture; "badlands" (covers of bruce's "nebraska"); and the corrs "unplugged." playing tracks from all these recordings gives me as complete a picture of the equipment under review as i can acomplish in a hour or so. for really important components (speakers, amps and pre's) i want to have at least a week of listening time, during which i throw several dozen more lp's and cd's onto their transports.
Hi Angela:

Here is my short list:

"Kepa Junkera" modern Basque music with many different instruments including percussive, distributed by Alula Records and is a two CD set.

"Clapton Unplugged" of course, and I use tracks one and thirteen.

"Engineer's Choice" John Argle's favorite demo tracks - classical.

Diana Krall "When I Look into Your Eyes", any track.

Cowboy Junkies "Lay it Down", track nine for female vocal.

K.D. Lang "Ingenue", any track.

And like Brulee I use a sampler "Voice Reflections, Women of Song" which was a give away at Barnes & Noble.

Since DanVet recently turned me onto a score of Lyle Lovett material I will also include much of this material as soon as I am better aquatinted with it.

For R&R I use The Eagles, "Hell" and "Hotel" CD's

I used to use a Sarah Vaugn and Billy Ekstine CD but gave it to my parents.

For "hall acoustics" I use "Celtic Solstice" by Paul Winter and friends, recorded at ST Paul's Cathedral in NY.

Another future candidate is the "Dead Man Walking" soundtrack and I also use various (many) tracks by Ry Cooder and some by Taj Mahal.
I use basically the same methods listed above. Have a standard set. It evolves, as do I. I also use this rotation when inserting a new component in my system, and again after break-in. Basically, I want to evaluate familiar recordings for male/female voice, saxophone/trumpet/piano/drums/cymbals(I love the cymbal test). I want to hear the tonal characteristics of a component, laid back or forward presentation, dynamics, bass response, weight, sound at low and high volume, and tendency to harshness or brightness. My list? Steely Dan-Aja(Black Cow and Aja), Francis Dunnery-Tall, Blond Helicopter(The Johnny Podell Song and I Believe I Can Change My World), Dar Williams-Mortal City(The Christians And The Pagans and Southern California Wants To Be Western New York), Lucinda Williams-Car Wheels On A Gravel Road(Car Wheels On A Gravel Road and Drunken Angel), The Cure-Mixed Up(Pictures Of You), John Coltrane-Blue Train(several tracks), and Sade-Best Of(several tracks).