Ron,
IMHO we all know that the high-end is a matter of preference and he share a subjective hobby. But is nice to learn that if we write it we can than refer to high-end components using extremely pejorative words such as "Great on Hifi criterias" and be considered as an introspective audiophile ...
Sorry, I am ready to accept all other clear subjective attributes, but I think that this is the type of comment that poisons a thread ...
Hi Microstrip,
I once said about an early iteration of the Wilson Watt Puppy driven by Krell that it sounded like ’big hi-fi’. I wasn’t being complementary. The system was extremely impressive but absolutely failed to involve me in the music.
But these days, sound quality has moved on, but what hasn’t evolved at the same pace is the vocabulary and language we use to describe it. We use words like ‘soundstage’, bass extension, layering, frequency extremes etc. But those terms are no longer sufficient to describe why one component or system sounds ‘magical’ or natural and highly involving, while another doesn’t.
Two systems can both deliver all the hi-if attributes, but if one makes us feel different to the other, what is the typical reviewer language used to describe those differences?
I was describing the effects of upgrading 3 network power supplies and it went something like, “it didn’t have a great effect on the typical hi-fi attributes, which were already excellent. Rather it changed how the listener perceives and responds to the system.....”. In other words, there was no “more or deeper bass”, no “change in frequency extremes”, no “additional soundstage width”, but what there was, which is difficult to describe, was a far greater level of emotional response and listener connection and involvement. So when someone says, “it does all the hi-fi stuff but......” I take that to mean that it has all the attributes we look for and report related to a hi-fi but somehow didn’t “light the listener’s fire“
What I have also learned is that this ability to let us ‘feel the music’s emotions’ doesn’t seem to lie so much with the speaker itself but rather with the signal the speakers are playing. For example, a system with an abundance of this characteristic loses it as soon as a new component is introduced into the signal or data stream path that first needs to run in.