When I got into this as a teen, 50+ years ago, I was exploring the Chess Real Folk Blues catalog. Howling Wolf was a favorite...not for the "sound" but for the musical intensity. I listened on Sennheiser HD414s then...very peaky and edgy on those records. Then I got a pair of Stax SR-5s. Now there was actually "air" in the monaural Chess studio sound, with a roundness of tone and absence of distortion that made the listening much more involving. Listening to the higher fidelity recordings of the day from the Dead, Tull, Pentangle, etc. all sounded better too, but the rough stuff benefited as well.
Can a great system make a mediocre recording sound good?
I spend a lot of time searching for well produced recordings as they (of course) sound so good on my system (Hegel 160 + Linn Majik 140 speakers). I can't tolerate poor sounding recordings - regardless of the quality of the performance itself. I was at a high end audio store yesterday and the sales person took the position that a really high-end system can make even mediocre recordings sound good. Agree?
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- 123 posts total
- 123 posts total