one thing is for sure the best measurements don’t always sound the best .
A perfect example A vacuum tube amp,or preamp measure no where near as good as even a mid fi amp but it’s distortions being even just sound right to the ear
I am always wary of entering this swamp, but the huge elephant on the table comes from music theory - dissonance and consonance. Its just plain mistaken to correlate " enjoyment" with "lest distorted, overall.
1. People's tastes differ
2. People's hearing differs. Many in our (and i step into muck here) hobby are old men and have high frequency hearing loss. Is a flat response best for them? BTW many old rockers have tons of HF hearing loss and IMNSHO master records accordingly. bright!
3. Consonant distorion can sound good. Its disortion, but enjoyable.
4. Dissonant distortion sounds awful.
5. Corollary to 3 and 4 - ideally we would have a weighted measurement of distortion - reducing or eliminating the weight of consonance and vice-versa.
6. Now, if ALL distortions go to zero, or close, we ought not to be able to hear them. But #1,2 above might complicate that assertion.
I have spent 30 years trying to find measurements that lead me to better sounding designs. I have a few. I also have a bigger library of design tricks that produce good sound, but i cannot always measure why. My stuff has adequate measurements for THD + noise, but compared to a super opamp like a 49720 or 1612 they suck ( that's a technical term). So back to Daniel and his quote..... (from many posts ago).
Anyway, for all this I may surprise many in that i generally prefer digital to analog, and get great results, by paying attention to basics.