@kijanki:
"One might prefer to look at the paintings thru yellow glasses. There is nothing wrong with it, but he doesn't see what artist painted".
Yes... BUT we are not robots with identical identical sound perception software installed! We each hear sound differently and our brains interpret it differently.
And there's a further difference. Whereas, perception of visual art is a direct process-- from canvas to eye to brain, in audio, the process has more intermediate steps (recording/mixing and conveyance of the music to our ears via circuits and speakers).
Is it not true that these added steps color/distort the accuracy of the original "painting ?
You can have the more accurate system in the world and you are still hearing what pleased the ears of the engineer/producer in the studio-- your experience is ultimately subject to the coloring/distortion associated with their taste and this is associated with their preferences in mics, monitors, etc.
Perhaps I'm missing something but I don't see how looking at a painting and listening to a recording are analogous.
It seems to me that for the analogy to hold up, we'd have to compare viewing a painting in a gallery to hearing music in a concert hall.
"One might prefer to look at the paintings thru yellow glasses. There is nothing wrong with it, but he doesn't see what artist painted".
Yes... BUT we are not robots with identical identical sound perception software installed! We each hear sound differently and our brains interpret it differently.
And there's a further difference. Whereas, perception of visual art is a direct process-- from canvas to eye to brain, in audio, the process has more intermediate steps (recording/mixing and conveyance of the music to our ears via circuits and speakers).
Is it not true that these added steps color/distort the accuracy of the original "painting ?
You can have the more accurate system in the world and you are still hearing what pleased the ears of the engineer/producer in the studio-- your experience is ultimately subject to the coloring/distortion associated with their taste and this is associated with their preferences in mics, monitors, etc.
Perhaps I'm missing something but I don't see how looking at a painting and listening to a recording are analogous.
It seems to me that for the analogy to hold up, we'd have to compare viewing a painting in a gallery to hearing music in a concert hall.