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![]() "Arny Krueger" wrote in message ... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message "Arny Krueger" wrote in message . .. "avidlistener" wrote in message ps.com Arny Krueger wrote: "avidlistener" wrote in message oups.com Getting the most accurate reproduction possible, through equipment that measures properly, connected to speakers that add as little distortion as possible, (and face it this is where most distortion is generated) in a properly set up room, OR Simply picking out equipment that gives you what you believe the music should sound like according to your own criteria, preference, biases, and emotions? Why would these necessarily be in conflict? There is no right answer, since the end goal is to make the listener happy when playing one's favorite recordings. Oh, a rhetorical post. They don't have to be, they just seem to be quite often. Mostly in people's minds. There seems to be two groups of audiophiles, one devoted to measured accuracy and one that doesn't care about measured performance, only about an emotional connection. For the vast majority of people, there is a fairly strong connection between the two. As I said, both are perfectly good reasons for choosing equipment, and probably the lines cross very often. There's considerable evidence that poor measured performance = bad sound that almost nobody likes. Fairly strong statements, Arny, presented as facts, not opinions. Your supporting evidence? Supporting evidence: (1) SE triodes abandoned by the mainstream audio world. (2) Tubes abandoned by the mainstream audio world. (3) LP format abandoned by the mainstream audio world. (4) Analog tape abandoned by the mainstream audio world. (1) SE triodes never were part of the mainsteam audio world, at least as we have know it since "hi-fi" came into being in the '50's. (2) Tubes were abandoned, and then "rediscovered" by hi-fi lovers *because* they sound better than SS to many "hi-fi" lovers. They now account for a sizeable chunk of the "hi-fi lovers" market. As opposed to the mass market where convenience and not sound quality holds sway. You can't prefer "more accurate" sound quality if you don't even pay attention to sound quality, wouldn't you agree, Arny? (3) LP abandoned because most people took abysmal care of their LPs, hated the resulting noise, and abandoned them for the "easy path" of CD. Convenience and freedom from care, more than sound quality, Arny. (4) Analog tape other than cassettes (in other words, where *sound quality* was king, never was part of the mainstream audio world, Arny.) And cassettes were again superceded by the CD because they were more convenient, Arny. Most users were perfectly happy with the sound of cassettes....and would be today if they came in the form of indestructable little disks. |
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