I don't have sibilance problems, are my speakers dull?


Another poster asked for help dealing with sibilant performances.

It got me to thinking, the one thing I have not had a problem with in like forever is sibilance. Maybe this is because I don’t seek to make my system "revealing" which to me often just means bright.

I’m now kind of curious, exactly what kind of gear and recordings bring this problem out?

Best,

E
erik_squires
I think it comes down to overly bright speakers, probably the less expensive speakers, probably the ones you guys don’t use.  I had some Energy Veritas that were horribly sibilant, same with a bunch of paradigms.  Pair them with bright cables and harsh amps and as a novice you’d think “lots of detail” or “crispy” and then you find out what sibilance is…
That last sentence made me smile remembering my listening skills, or lack of skills, some 20-30 years ago.  Some lessons weren't fun. grin.
When I bought Sonus Faber sonettos, I was using a Sonos amp and immediately noticed horrible sibilance and overall brightness. When I ditched the Sonos amp and got a NAD m10 I had silky smooth, detailed highs and never again heard any sibilance. In fact the speakers got even more detailed. I think alot of sibilance is also caused by amps that have alot of distortion in the upper hand.
I’m now kind of curious, exactly what kind of gear and recordings bring this problem out?
Its a distortion problem. If you have a problem with the setup of your phono cartridge (or its suspension is shot) you can get sibilance.


Another way this can be caused is by a bad driver in a loudspeaker. A woofer that has a shot suspension can introduce sibilance that can sound for all the world as if its caused by a tweeter. A rubbing voice coil can do this too.


I've had a variety of speakers and amps yet not encountered the issues described by @dekay above. I started with the original American pressing of the Trinity Sessions and then eventually found the the Canadian press, which is a little more immediate. Neither version had any problems, which is why the recording was popular with audiophiles. Is there some peakiness in the recording? Sure, but not the point of sibilance.