Since all tastes are different and all speakers are compromises (due to the tastes of the individual who designed them), I go with the one(s) that sound great to me.
All the best,
Nonoise
All the best,
Nonoise
Should a reference speaker be neutral, or just great sounding?
Wasn’t it Harman that did a lot of speaker tests where the speakers with the flattest response were picked as the best sounding? No matter if it was professional listeners or Joe off the street. John Dunlavy interview. https://www.stereophile.com/interviews/163/index.html |
It's like Robert Parker Jr giving a 95 rating to a bottle of red. The score is calibrated to his own personal palate not some standardized neutral bottle of wine. When you follow his wine ratings you get to know more about his own personal preferences than necessarily how the wine will be received by 1000 randomized sippers. Face it, you need to get to know a reviewer over dozens of reviews and often years to understand if his or her musical priorities match with yours and also discover where they differ. We are measuring an emotional sense of sound and musical pleasure just like a wine reviewer or food critic is trying to score a taste - this cannot be calibrated mechanically. Just accept the human element. |