Let me get us back to what Ron post:
I am 100% with him. Who else is?
At Axpona there was a grand piano in the lobby of the hotel. As we were getting close to it one of the manufacturer reps sat there and started to play a nice Elton John tune. We walked up to the Piano and enjoyed him doing so. Until he sang that is.
Here is the thing: if anyone's stereo reproduced that piano sound the way it was, they would cut off their wrists and jump out of the tallest building they could. Take Leif and VSA where he says he had a giant soundstage. The live piano had none of that. Heck, it was not even "stereo"! It was rather dull sound resembling nothing of the audiophile recordings we cherish where tremendous amount of post processing is applied to make it sound like what we want Piano to sound like, not what it is in real life. Our preferences have shaped the recorded music to something that is its own art form, separate and distinct from life.
So no, you don't learn a thing from listening to live piano a million times and then listening to someone else's performance on a recording from audiophile perspective. We hide behind such false pretences to make our opinion count more should we be situated that way. It has no logical or physical reality to match it as likeable as the theory is. Or else, musicians would clean our clocks good and have the best audio systems. Which they do not.
amir, Are you claiming that the sound of that live piano, even in a controlled blind test, would resemble absolutely nothing of the (piano) recordings we cherish? If so, how can you identify the sound of a piano on a single one of your CDs? Was there really absolutely NO RESEMBLANCE between the live piano and a recorded piano? Do you mean like a gunshot not resembling the sound of a kitten purring? Surely, this is not an accurate statement.
With all due respect, you should get out more and hear a variety of live instruments, including pianos, in a variety of settings. You will learn that various instruments (and different pianos) sound different from each other, and that there is no absolute sound. But most or all pianos do resemble each other and they are identifiable on most recordings. Without ever having heard a real piano, you would have no basis for knowing whether or not your system remotely resembles the sound of a real piano. I bet, even blindfolded, you could identify the sound of a piano on your audio system, if you wanted to. But perhaps you think that all pianos do sound alike, just like all cables sound alike, and those of us who hear differences are deluding ourselves.
He's not claiming anything Peter just yanking everyone's chain!
david
Not so sure I agree with you on this one David
The members (crew) could rent one of those if they would, and sail all the seas listening to the waves and stop @ all world's ports for live music adventures.
Wouldn't it be nice... :b
Gregadd said:The problem with most blind tests is that there is no prior attempt to assure there is a trait present in sample A that is missing in sample B.
Why would you need to assure that? The purpose of the test is not to confirm THAT there is a difference, the purpose is to determine IF there is one. Should you really “need” assurance for whatever reason, go and measure or do a sighted test first, the latter for those “audiophiles who walk blindly expecting to discern a difference when in fact there is none”.
Is that any better than audiophiles who walk blindly expecting to discern no difference when in fact there was one?
Stehno, I think it is really pretty simple and I am sorry that you seem disturbed by my friend's view and think it is dogmatic. My friend was basically telling me that if someone is attempting to describe the quality of audio equipment or pass a quality judgement on a system, and he has never listened to live music, amplified, or unamplified, then my friend does not pay "MUCH" attention to the guy's opinion. I presume it is because he lacks experience with live music. This is not the same as claiming that one who listens to a lot of live music has the ability, knowledge and experience to judge the quality of an audio system or component, but that at least he has some experience with how a real violin, guitar, drum or voice sounds and can therefore refer to his memory of that sound when making a judgement about the sound of a particular component or system. Though it is certainly no guarantee of his ability to judge the quality of a system, he at least has some starting point, or reference, that the guy who has never heard live music does not have.
I just think that someone who has heard the sound of a live piano is more able to judge if the sound of a system resembles the sound of a live piano more than someone who has never heard that live instrument. Do you really think that that is a dogmatic position and harmful to the cause of increasing knowledge about audio reproduction?
I see no mutually exclusive purpose here. It can be used to discover or confirm the existence of a difference.Why would you need to assure that? The purpose of the test is not to confirm THAT there is a difference, the purpose is to determine IF there is one. Should you really “need” assurance for whatever reason, go and measure or do a sighted test first, the latter for those “audiophiles who walk blindly expecting to discern a difference when in fact there is none”.
At Axpona there was a grand piano in the lobby of the hotel. As we were getting close to it one of the manufacturer reps sat there and started to play a nice Elton John tune. We walked up to the Piano and enjoyed him doing so. Until he sang that is.
Here is the thing: if anyone's stereo reproduced that piano sound the way it was, they would cut off their wrists and jump out of the tallest building they could. Take Leif and VSA where he says he had a giant soundstage. The live piano had none of that. Heck, it was not even "stereo"! It was rather dull sound resembling nothing of the audiophile recordings we cherish where tremendous amount of post processing is applied to make it sound like what we want Piano to sound like, not what it is in real life. Our preferences have shaped the recorded music to something that is its own art form, separate and distinct from life.
So no, you don't learn a thing from listening to live piano a million times and then listening to someone else's performance on a recording from audiophile perspective. We hide behind such false pretences to make our opinion count more should we be situated that way. It has no logical or physical reality to match it as likeable as the theory is. Or else, musicians would clean our clocks good and have the best audio systems. Which they do not.
Like it or not live music is and must remain our standard. Otherwise we are just chasing our tail. That is the fatal flaw of the scientific/measurement approach. Perfect measures don't produce musical results.
c
Gregadd said:Originally Posted by KlausR.
"Why would you need to assure that? The purpose of the test is not to confirm THAT there is a difference, the purpose is to determine IF there is one."
The point is we ought to be sure the test is capable of revealing a musical difference.
For example if we claim device A is less fatigueing we ought to listen long enough for fatigue to set in.
Some questions: 1. Why would the fact that a listening test is done blind conceal real differences?(...)
microstrip said:Again, it is not the absence of knowledge that conceals the differences, it is the practical conditions in which you realize the test.
Also again, if people cared for positive tests they would know about it since long. But objectivists usually prefer to ignore this subject. Did you ever subjected yourself to a proper positive test?