@gbmcleod
Well said in many words. My new distributor/dealer with whom I’ve acquired my hopefully last equipment upgrade (Von Schwiekert/Lampizator/Westminster Labs/Jay’s Audio w/VPI/SME IV mod) is a now a good friend as he recognizes my ability to hear from a life of listening and performing acoustic music at major venues in SoCal, as a part-time recording engineer, friends with golden ear hearing and remastering engineer friends. I am also the archivist for two classical music composers.
So, with my sizable 61,200 LPs/CDs/78s/R2R recordings I have great experience listening a minimum of 2 hours daily since 2005 and from 1970 to 1980, 6 to 8 hours (chamber music, small scale instrumental) while studying/reading. I also wrote and heard 70+ performances of classical music the Daily Bruin and Royce Hall productions.
Truly, my first excellent system consisted of a VPI 19-4/mod. SME IV analog front end with an Audio Research SP14 preamp and Classic 60 amp with unfortunately, electrostat speakers or various types, generic cabling until I got AudioSource until 1995.
It is with acoustic music that equipment reveals the totality of it’s/their ability. I enjoy Yello as well but don’t consider their recordings to be adequate to judge a system but it’s useful for dynamics and frequency response.
I have all the stereo Mercury Living Stereo LPs/CDs and 1/3 of the monos. The RCA Living Stereo LPs vary greatly as do London/Decca from the 50’s and 60’s but generally could produce wonderous recordings. It is unfortunate that quality of recorded production generally declined in the 1970s and began reviving in the digital era. Unfortunately again, the lack of engineer’s experience with acoustic music and the myriad digital computer treatment to "create" pop music circa 1995 to the present have ruined much recorded music.
I just was gifted a Billie Eilish LP. The production values are terrible. Thick, goopy backup music to really juvenile sounding singing that so many friends find superb and they’re in their 60s to 80s. They grew up with the Beatles and Beach Boys, my wife loves rock from the 60’s to 80’s, including Steely Dan, Led Zeppelin, Guess Who, etc. I like them especially when the recordings are good (not so much the manipulated Queen).
Well, I suppose one get’s the idea that without hearing acoustic and well recorded/engineered music (Bones Howe and Howard Holzer who was even better than Rudy Van Gelder) there’s difficulty in audio engineering equipment and cabling.