“Faithful to the recording”


I despise when reviewers use those words in describing a piece of equipment unless they were, quite literally, at the recording.  Once those words are used, I pretty much stop reading since IMO the reviewer is full of BS.

Your thoughts?

And what key word(s) or phrases cause you to stop reading?

 

128x128audiodwebe

Perhaps such terms of praise are best viewed as a measure of the reviewer's enthusiasm rather than an accurate description of what is occurring sonically, although given that each listener perceives and judges sound differently, I'm not sure there is an "objective vocabulary".

Brings to mind the Les McCann lyric "Tryin' to make it real compared to what". . . as in, what would you all rather hear from reviewers?

 

 

@stuartk  maybe that's why I seldom read a review anymore, except to sometimes get specs and prices of something I find interesting.

"Faithful to a recording"means nothing...or almost nothing at best.... 😁😊

i agree...

But there is a misconception in all audio...

Some claim that an ideal speaker set for example COULD be faithful to the recording...

This is also meaningless, not because there is no perfect speakers, but because these alleged perfect speakers must be located in a SPECIFIC IMPERFECT room with his acoustic content and acoustic geography...

The goal in audio is the creation/translation of this music/sound from one acoustical context, which is the RELATIVE perspective of the recording process on a lived event, to be translated in the psycho-acoustic geography of your room which is also a relative acoustic and esthetic perspective from and on the recording event ....

All this meaningless descriptions about absolute fidelity and "reproduction" instead of the more correct TRANSLATION word, come from the gear market publicity and sellers(reviewers)..,

And also from the forgetfulness that between the specific trade-off choices during recording process, there is TWO acoustic perspectives, the specific perspective of a listener seating at the original lived event, and the perspective of the listener with the play back gear in relation with his specific room and ears...

Then this misconception about being " faithful to the recording" it did not come from acoustic experience for sure , but from gear sellers...

And the desesperate pursuit toward some new piece of gear allegedly able to be more "faithful to the recording" erase the importance of room acoustic out of the equation at worst and at best put it in the secondary position completely, a minor necessity instead of the center of the experience itself, which it is...

Selling is not always educating....it is also unvolontarily deception of ourself to begin with....

 

 

Isn’t the recording the information contained on the media?

If so, then any gear that sucks it up and reproduces it without introducing audible "coloration" (however defined), distortion or any number of other unwanted artifacts?

I never read that part of reviews. It is all flowery nonsense to me not to mention I've hardly ever heard the recordings they use and have no point f reference. Just because they are reviewer does does not mean they know what to listen for. The fact that they ascribe characteristics to equipment that it can not possibly have makes me think they have no idea what they are talking about.

With most of the reviewers quality follows cost. When they all get excited about a less expensive piece of gear, like the JC 1 amplifiers and the Channel D Lino C you probably have real winners.