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Most audiophile magazines give recordings they review a grade for sound and performance and often discuss the sound in their review. Many music magazines don't because people who care about sound are a tiny minority of their readers. Paul McGowan of PS Audio posted about how he recently recorded a string quartet and had this experience: https://www.psaudio.com/pauls-posts/relative-better/ |
When films are screened for film critics, I imagine that they are good quality renditions (used to call them "prints") on good/big screens with proper sound, etc. If a director or composer has made an effort to include something in the film, the playback should not obscure it. And a good film critic would know the optimal playback conditions for a film. I see no reason the above argument doesn’t transfer without loss to the music critic. Now, whether an article of music criticism *should* discuss the audiophile technicalities is an interesting one. I’d love to see it, but I could imagine that for reviews with word-limits (i.e., all of them) it could displace important critical remarks about more central considerations. |
- 9 posts total