What do audiophiles want from a cable?


What should a high quality interconnect or speaker cable do to the sound of a system? Make it more transparent? Improve the sound stage and focus? Soften unpleasant highs? Tighten the base? Bring out the mids?

To me, a good cable should reveal more of what is on the recording and more of the true nature of my components. So when trying new cables, I look for more detail and accuracy without becoming cold and clinical. This seems logical, and yet after reading reviews and trying a few of the cables in the reviews, I find that the cables that have received glowing endorsements are not especially transparent or revealing. They modify the sound, but they don’t take me where I want to go. I wonder if the reason I don’t hear what the reviewer heard is that I don’t know what to listen for. Am I too focused on cable accuracy and resolution, and not enough on actual sound quality? Or is it just a case of no two systems sounding alike so why trust a review anyway? Thanks.
mward
"My guess is that audiophiles see cables as similar to water hoses, and the goal is to increase the flow and remove the constriction. That's at odds with reality, since we're not dealing with electrons flowing into preamps, amps or speakers."

I hope the above is a typo!  If its not electrons flowing along the cables into our components and speakers then what is it?  Little fairies?
Yeah, let's talk about Higg's bosons too and their influence on what we hear. Could be interesting.
Thank you, Dave. With age I increasingly feel the gravity of the gravitational forces that sometimes reveal themselves in unexpected ways. I think, those bizarre so-called elementary particles, especially some of those little bastards, are beginning to get on my nerves, but I have no idea why.