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Systems that only play one type of music well. [message #86489] Mon, 06 November 2017 16:38 Go to next message
WorkingWoman2017 is currently offline  WorkingWoman2017
Messages: 82
Registered: June 2017
Viscount
I have quite a few audiophile friends and recently made the rounds listening to their systems using a variety of recordings and came to the conclusion that they had built their system to only sound good with audiophile stuff so that's all they could listen to on a regular basis. Any thoughts on that?
Re: Systems that only play one type of music well. [message #86500 is a reply to message #86489] Wed, 08 November 2017 15:38 Go to previous messageGo to next message
gofar99 is currently offline  gofar99
Messages: 1955
Registered: May 2010
Location: Southern Arizona
Illuminati (5th Degree)
Hi, I listen to all sorts of stuff but mostly vinyl followed by CDs. I won't listen to anything recorded poorly. There is too much that is done well to do that.

Good Listening
Bruce
Re: Systems that only play one type of music well. [message #86502 is a reply to message #86500] Wed, 08 November 2017 16:49 Go to previous message
Wayne Parham is currently offline  Wayne Parham
Messages: 18793
Registered: January 2001
Illuminati (33rd Degree)

You can only get out what you put in. Anything else is an alteration of the input signal. A good system is designed to reproduce the input signal faithfully, not to distort, alter or enhance it in any way.

Having a system that sounds better on some material than others can be an indication of some sort of defect. Could be in the playback system, or could be in the recording.

As an example, some radio stations intentionally enhance bass and treble and compress the dynamic range. This sounds good on little portable devices that lack dynamic range and response at both ends of the spectrum. But when you play this on a good system, it sounds bad - it sounds like what it is - compressed, spitty and bass heavy.

So but that leads to one problem with a good system. Play bad stuff through it and it sounds bad. Play a record that had been overdubbed too many times in the recording studio and you'll hear the tape hiss. Play a CD that had been compressed too much during production for top-forty airplay and it sounds like an AM radio turned up too loud. These things are in the material, so they'll expose themselves like a rotten fish when played back on a good system.

Garbage in, garbage out.

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