@axo1989
I’ve always been fascinated by the difference between live and reproduced sound.
I don’t pretend that my system (or any system) could reproduce all the recorded (acoustic) music as it sounded in front of the microphones (and that isn’t even the goal in most cases for recordings). But I do find it fascinating noticing to what degree reproduced sound can get closer to the real thing or not. It was actually discovering that a good system could reproduce *some* characteristics I love about live sound that got me in to hi-fi.
So I’m constantly checking the difference. For instance I live right near a very popular urban street surrounded by parks and live performances are a constant - small bands on street corners, in parks, in bars etc. So if I come upon, say, a quartet playing jazz, I will close my eyes and take note, asking myself "what does this sound like? What distinguishes it from reproduced sound?"
One of the main things that stick out to me are an effortless clarity, a timbral richness, dynamic life, but especially the sheer size of the sound. A sax or trombone sounds far bigger and richer, with very dense acoustic power. It makes most reproduced versions seem more like miniaturized, spectral toys that I can wave my hands through.
And drums always strike me for having a different balance than in reproduced sound. With closed eyes everything sounds BIG or life-sized, the kick drum is big, the snare is big, the cymbals sound BIG. There is no "pear shape" effect, like the cymbals being squeezed through tiny tweeters.
So it always impresses me whenever I hear a speaker that seems to portray instruments with more realistic size, weight and density, especially in the upper frequencies which is even more rare.
I don’t for a minute mean to suggest the Devore speakers produce drums or anything else with absolute realism. Only that to my ears, in some parameters, they are going a little further in that direction than many speakers I’ve heard.
I don’t demand that my system fool me I’m hearing real sounds. But when it’s a natural sounding recording of acoustic instruments, if a speaker is doing at least some of the things I like about real instruments, it can make "slipping in to the illusion" pleasurable and easier. I approach it like watching a movie. A movie is never going to look totally real (and often shouldn’t), it’s a 2D screen, contrast etc is never fully lifelike. But the reason many productions go to great lengths to "get things right" (sets, clothes, script that are plausible) is that it makes it easier to slip in to the illusion of the story. "Believable" being the goal, which acknowledges the user is willfully entering the illusion, not an impossible goal of "Absolute Realism."
One would expect that reproducing a full symphony orchestra via a pair of average sized floor standing speakers is a pipe dream, and of course it is in any Absolute sense. Yet, I’ve tweaked my system to the degree that I find it tonally convincing, and spatially prodigious, and when I play a good orchestral piece, if I meet the illusion 1/2 way, and just imagine I’m listening to an orchestra from seats further away, then the size seems "right" and life-sized, and the sensation of peering through a hall listening to a real orchestra can be quite thrilling.