Hello Frank
Could you elaborate I am not sure what you mean. As I see it the frequency response accuracy is extremely relevant. If I understand you correctly you are saying a "better system" can have poor accuracy compared to say a less expensive more accurate system and sound better??
Rob
This is a matter I have referred to a number of times, and is as Gary would say, pyschoacoustic. To rephrase, one's perception of the sound quality changes as certain intrinsic qualities other than the frequency response change, which renders the frequency response of a far lower level of importance. This is something that I discovered for myself, when investigating the effects of extensive tweaking of a system. As a simple example, at one stage I was playing with a normal Sony integrated amp, which had the usual treble and bass controls. When this amp was in a normal state it was obvious the impact of severely boosting and attenuating these two areas of the spectrum. By dint of some devious tweaking, of very short term benefit, I could get this gear to perform well above its station, very transitory high end behaviour. While in this state I could rotate these tone controls from minimum to maximum, and to my amazement found it almost impossible to audibly pick that anything had happened!
How can this be so? As mentioned above, I believe it is psychoacoustic, the mind playing tricks on you. When the sound is at a very high quality level, very low distortion, then the musical message of the recording overwhelms everything. The ear/brain tunes into listening intently to the performance and ignores elements that it considers irrelevant, allowing you to gain maximum pleasure from the experience.
There is a live music analogy: imagine listening to a very fine violin solo; you will be totally drawn into the moment (assuming such things are your bag!
), oblivious to other stimulus. On the other hand, an acquaintance showing you how far they had got in learning to play this instrument: the last thing you tune into is the musical content, you are aware of every tiny imperfection in the violin's sound, the person's foot scraping on the floor, a window in the room slighty rattling. This is equivalent to being highly sensitive to the frequency response, which is what you need to transcend. In other words, your system should always perform at the level of a fine violinist, because then minor or less important imperfections become irrelevant to the listening exerience.
Frank