My pet peeve: "revealing" speakers


The one word that bugs me the most in all of the audiophile world is "revealing." 

It's plenty descriptive but it's also biased.  What I mean is that speakers that are revealing are also usually quite colored. They don't unveil a recording, they focus your attention by suppressing some tones and enhancing others. The reviewer who suddenly discovers hearing things he has never heard before and now goes through his entire library has fallen for this trap hook line and sinker.

This is not always true, as some speakers are revealing by ignoring the room.  They can remain tonally neutral but give you a headphone like experience.  I'm not talking about them.  I'm talking about the others.  I  wish we had a better word for it.

Mind you, I believe you should buy speakers based on your personal preferences.  Revealing, warm, neutral, whatever.  I'm just saying this word is deceptive, as if there were no down side when there is. 

Best,

Erik
erik_squires
Mozartfan, Please take a moment if you will and describe for us exactly how you would find a speaker truly neutral to the source? What would you recommend others do to that same end?
@newbee :

That's definitely a very popular method, and honestly this is a great solution for listening at low volumes.  The current line of Dali and some Dynaudio go this route.  Some create this by having a low impedance in the same area you described.

The other way is more subtle, to introduce peaks and valleys in the tweeter.

I'm not criticizing these speakers per se, buy what you like.

Best,

E
Good speakers are a major investment so why would anyone buy a pair of speakers solely based on the manufacturers claim that they are revealing? Certainly there is more that contribute to a speaker's overall sound. It could be that the word revealing is over-used and is not the end game.

In addition who would buy speakers without hearing them first hand in your own listening room? This comes down to using your ears which are the best instruments for evaluating any component.
why would anyone buy a pair of speakers solely based on the manufacturers claim that they are revealing?

@phd 

I certainly never brought up manufacturer's claims. I was talking about reviewers, both professional and amateur.

It could be that the word revealing is over-used and is not the end game.

I think so.
I don’t know if we need to change the word revealing. Maybe some reviewers are just misusing the word to describe something else?