Connecting the ground wire makes music less lively


Friends,
Lately for some strange reason I heard hum from my TT setup. When I connected the tonearm ground wire to the phono the hum was gone. Thats the good news. The bad news is, when I heard the music with the ground wire connected, it sounded less lively, less palpable. Some vitality was taken away. When I remove the ground wire the life in the music is again back, just that the background hum is audible during silent passages (thats irritating). Has anyone else heard this effect ? Is there a solution to this problem ?

My phono stage is very heavy and can't be moved around. I have to say this problem is quite disturbing because either way there seem to be a serious compromise which is not really the fault of the components.
pani
My system:
Garrard 301 turntable
SME M2-12 tonearm
Audio Technica ART9 and Denon 103r cartridges
Naim Superline/Supercap phonostage
Lamm LL2 preamp
FM Acoustics F10 power amp
Tannoy Turnberry SE speakers

Cables are all Mogami 2803 with Auditorium 23 speaker cables
Phonograph cartridges are a balanced source. That is why the ground wire is needed, as it is the ground of the balanced system. The thing is, when employed as a single-ended source, the capacitance of the interconnect plays a bigger role when the ground cable is connected.

By running a balanced preamp that ignores ground at its input, you get around this problem. Truly balanced systems tend to be very cable-immune.

If you don't want to replace your preamp, you might have to consider a lower capacitance cable between the arm and preamp.
I'm wondering if the liveliness you describe is low level noise coming through the ground connection.....