...I spend several hours each day around the sound of acoustic instruments. I KNOW what they are supposed to sound like; I KNOW which cable, in my system, gets me closest to that sound. That knowledge is not simply preference or "like"; it is knowledge of what is RIGHT. Should I overlook that knowledge, and instead live in a "matrix" of relativism in the spirit of open-mindedness? I have no interest in having anyone see things my way (in audio; anyway), but the answer has to be: No thanks, life is too short....
Well, I've heard that a bunch of times. I don't buy the, "I'm a (fill in the blank) so I'm better than you at 'right' ". That's about as bias as you get.
No, I'll stick with my statements. Statistically any universe of 2000 era car will beat the pants of production universe of '60's iron. But then to make yourself feel "right" you can find just ONE example that works. Good for you. In 1960 reliability was more accident by far than 2000. The "matrix" isn't one dot at a a time.
I'll say it yet again, there is NO RIGHT in audio. Why, because there is no metric for comparison on a consistent basis. The "universe" is never the same. Recorded music is a complete mess. Let’s say you design a system to play your "right" music. Now it's more wrong on the "wrong" music because it fails to normalize the deficiencies to where "it" is closer to right. We keep equalizing at all levels to a given source, that now CANNOT change! It does. So you have something that is right on one source, but wrong on all the rest. Is that right? Is more music closer to right more right, or less music relative to a given source?
No one can even claim a recording (a mess in itself) is right even before we play it back.
I mean seriously, EVERYONE is "right" and NO ONE is even close to sounding the same. And, we have a universe of expert that are more right than the next guy yet everyone of you would duke it out in a closed room as to who was "right". Yet we all claim to know right? Some one, a lot of someone's, are really wrong.
Don't even get me started on the pathetic transient response / dynamic range of systems, and the ridiculous notion we can play back an orchestra from the stuff we use. Maybe, just maybe, a small folk band might get close to real dynamic range and image focus.
My system? Inaccurate for sure. Sounds good, though. That's all you can do is realize this is enjoyment, and NOT a test. Who gives a hoot if you can assemble the bass blaster 1000 at 120 dB if that's what you want? To sit around and play the accuracy game? Yes, life is too short. I play the, "get it like I want to listen" game. There are enough challenges in life.
My MATRIX thread is about getting the sound YOU like to hear, and realizing things change over time (cables are able to tune the sound much more than before) and to reasses what "you" like to hear, to move your system to what pleases you. THAT is what's right.
A proper DOE tunes input to maximize your desired output. It points out the maximum attributes that effect the process or design attributes YOU want to move most efficiently. Is it "right"? Well, maybe we all want to work on our cars every weekend like our 1965 Dodger Dart (it was even "reliable" in the day) and reliability isn't what we should have improved.
So go ahead, pick something. But someone can always say it is wrong. So what. The choices are yours, make sure you enjoy it.
Well, I've heard that a bunch of times. I don't buy the, "I'm a (fill in the blank) so I'm better than you at 'right' ". That's about as bias as you get.
No, I'll stick with my statements. Statistically any universe of 2000 era car will beat the pants of production universe of '60's iron. But then to make yourself feel "right" you can find just ONE example that works. Good for you. In 1960 reliability was more accident by far than 2000. The "matrix" isn't one dot at a a time.
I'll say it yet again, there is NO RIGHT in audio. Why, because there is no metric for comparison on a consistent basis. The "universe" is never the same. Recorded music is a complete mess. Let’s say you design a system to play your "right" music. Now it's more wrong on the "wrong" music because it fails to normalize the deficiencies to where "it" is closer to right. We keep equalizing at all levels to a given source, that now CANNOT change! It does. So you have something that is right on one source, but wrong on all the rest. Is that right? Is more music closer to right more right, or less music relative to a given source?
No one can even claim a recording (a mess in itself) is right even before we play it back.
I mean seriously, EVERYONE is "right" and NO ONE is even close to sounding the same. And, we have a universe of expert that are more right than the next guy yet everyone of you would duke it out in a closed room as to who was "right". Yet we all claim to know right? Some one, a lot of someone's, are really wrong.
Don't even get me started on the pathetic transient response / dynamic range of systems, and the ridiculous notion we can play back an orchestra from the stuff we use. Maybe, just maybe, a small folk band might get close to real dynamic range and image focus.
My system? Inaccurate for sure. Sounds good, though. That's all you can do is realize this is enjoyment, and NOT a test. Who gives a hoot if you can assemble the bass blaster 1000 at 120 dB if that's what you want? To sit around and play the accuracy game? Yes, life is too short. I play the, "get it like I want to listen" game. There are enough challenges in life.
My MATRIX thread is about getting the sound YOU like to hear, and realizing things change over time (cables are able to tune the sound much more than before) and to reasses what "you" like to hear, to move your system to what pleases you. THAT is what's right.
A proper DOE tunes input to maximize your desired output. It points out the maximum attributes that effect the process or design attributes YOU want to move most efficiently. Is it "right"? Well, maybe we all want to work on our cars every weekend like our 1965 Dodger Dart (it was even "reliable" in the day) and reliability isn't what we should have improved.
So go ahead, pick something. But someone can always say it is wrong. So what. The choices are yours, make sure you enjoy it.