Is the appeal to euphonic distortion learned?


Hi everyone,

I have been thinking a little bit about the idea of euphonic distortion. The idea that we can make an amplifier or preamplifier sound better by not being so absolutely true to the input. The common story is that by adding 2nd order harmonics the music sounds more pleasant to more people. Certainly Pass has written a great deal, and with more nuance and detail about this and makes no bones about his desire to make a good sounding, rather than well measuring product.

Lets keep this simple description of euphonic distortion for the sake of argument, or we’ll devolve into a definition game.

I’m wondering whether it is possible that this is in large part learned? For instance, if I grew up with non-euphonic amps and then was exposed to an amp with high amounts of 2nd order distortion would I like it? Is the appeal here one which you have to have learned to like? Like black coffee through a French press?

And this discussion is of course in line with my thoughts about the ear/brain learning process. That there are no absolute’s in music reproduction because we keep re-training our ears. We keep adjusting what we listen to and ultimately at some point have to decide whether the discrimination between gear makes us happier or not. (Go ahead writers, steal this topic and don't mention me again, I know who you are).
erik_squires
I grew up listening to cheap solid state.So the nurturing pushed me away from that and into the sound of tubed equipment. It sounds so much closer to live music to me
If you've ever looked through yellow tinted glasses, it's amazing how bright and pretty everything looks. And how artificial. I'm not interested in my music getting a boob job. JMO.
Powered artificial (pre & amps) interaction is influential no matter which type distortion, how much distortion, how little distortion. The very acoustic backbone of sound is in the overtones. This is the math and science turned into art. Do you hear it ?
People like different sounds and types of equipment but i have noticed when shown a true superior product the likelihood that almost all of the people will like the product is very high like 9 out of 10 even in large groups. When you play music on that special piece or system it will draw a group of people to hear it because they have never heard that type of sound before.