System balance and goals are crucial, as lightminer suggests. Heck I've got a $20 clock radio that sounds really nice - it just does not attempt to reproduce any sound out of it's natural narrow band in the midrange.
As far as reviews being never negative... well they ARE if you read them properly.
Have you ever been to a restaurant where you ask the waiter their opinion of a dish, and they kind of wince a little bit and say "well, it's good". What they are telling you is (1) it's BAD and (2) they can't be so up front about that for political reasons.
Negative reviews end in some variation of faint praise.
"I enjoyed my time with these speakers"
as opposed to
"I bought the review pair!"
"Anyone shopping for speakers in this price range should check these out'
as opposed to
"New benchmark in it's price range!".
Qualification by taste is a good one too:
"Anyone seeking a pair of speakers to match with a slightly lean sounding amp should check these out."
ETC.
I used to be annoyed by all this but now I find it amusing. The review journals need to be able to communicate to the reader, accurately, without directly insulting the potential advertiser.
And they do. You just need to learn the "code".
Art
As far as reviews being never negative... well they ARE if you read them properly.
Have you ever been to a restaurant where you ask the waiter their opinion of a dish, and they kind of wince a little bit and say "well, it's good". What they are telling you is (1) it's BAD and (2) they can't be so up front about that for political reasons.
Negative reviews end in some variation of faint praise.
"I enjoyed my time with these speakers"
as opposed to
"I bought the review pair!"
"Anyone shopping for speakers in this price range should check these out'
as opposed to
"New benchmark in it's price range!".
Qualification by taste is a good one too:
"Anyone seeking a pair of speakers to match with a slightly lean sounding amp should check these out."
ETC.
I used to be annoyed by all this but now I find it amusing. The review journals need to be able to communicate to the reader, accurately, without directly insulting the potential advertiser.
And they do. You just need to learn the "code".
Art