Elliot G.
Industry Expert
First thank you Ron for your reply and your answers.My primary musical genre interest is solo vocals. I feel that the transparency and open presentation of planar dipoles achieves for me the greatest suspension of disbelief of different speaker topologies on solo vocals.
So my cues here are transparency and "breath of life," in-the-room presence.
I find the "wetness"/liquidity of tubes achieves a greater sense of the cue of "breath of life" and in-the-room presence than solid-state.
I wouldn't say records, I would say analog. If the tape sound quality is there I much prefer the tape medium closer to the generation of the original master recording than to the mass market distribution medium of vinyl.
I simply listen to what I like. And the stuff I really like I like far more than the stuff I like only a little bit. So I'd rather spend time listening to the former, rather than to the latter.
I don't think these are sonic cues but rather your personal taste.
To me music is not wet nor dry, these are audiophile terms. My goal is always the sound of live music, live unamplified music in a real space. Voices are not liquid or wet or dry they are just voices. Some are really pretty and smooth most are not. Adele sings nothing like the Boss, Jagger nothing like Whitney they are artists/stylist/musicians. Music in a studio , most music produced, does not sound live ( perhaps a few exceptions) However if one knows the sound of a acoustic 6 string, or a violin, or a piano these experiences help define a path towards making good choices. I believe you start small and work out many believe the opposite but they are both choices and goals.
I don't go looking for gear it comes to me. That's the truth. These collisions or accidents just happen, fate whatever there is no WOO WOO about it. My goal are to play and enjoy every type of music i want to play. The gear are just parts and one has to work the parts, the room , the set up to make it work.
I think most of the premises of these discussions lie way out side of what music is and can be but rather searching for approval and permission to enjoy what people have. One needs to discover what they are trying to achieve. Your goals are yours and yours alone, not mine or someone else's. That is perfectly fine but these are not mine or perhaps anyone else's. I don't go to listen to live music searching for clues or cues. IMO your taste is the romantic, perfectly fine, but only some music fits this, not rock, not blues, not large scale orchestral etc. My taste is I like almost everything and I want a system and products that help me reach this unreachable goal. Many like the golden glow this is a coloration and one someone may choose but they need to realize that this is a coloration.
Define your goal to reach your goal. If you don't have a dedicated room then define the compromise you will live with. If you have to put your system in a family room the same. If the "speakers" have to go there that's another choice. In audio as in life one size does not fit all.
I think that more discussions of what people want and like are effective ways of understanding what and why they have the gear they have rather than mine is better than yours.
I told this joke to a few at Capfest to describe the Audiophile decision matrix. This an analogy and not meant to offend anyone
A man is dating 3 women. He is trying to decide which one to marry. He gives each woman 10 k as a gift.
The first woman goes and gets her hair styled, her nails done, her body waxed and buys a sexy outfit. She comes back and tells the man and says I did all this to look great for you.
The second woman goes out and buys a new big screen tv and a terrific leather recliner and comes back ands says Hoey I bought all this to please you
The third woman invested the money can comes back and returns the 10k and says honey I made 5 k for us to save for the future.
The man was thrilled and took a day to decide
He asked the woman with the biggest boobs to marry him!