The more I think about "leading edge", 'transient response' or 'leading edge transient response' the less I believe I know what those words mean.
These are sonic words, audiophile speak.
"Leading edge" refers to the start of a note?
In music it is possible to accent a note with a specific type of marking in the score.
View attachment 78722
There are a variety of accents and accent marks from light to strong. The above is normal (marcato) accent. Staccato, a light accent, is shown with a dot over/under the note. Different instruments have different capacities for delivering accented notes. I understand an accented note as a more pronounced than one without an accent.
But that's not what people mean when they talk about leading edge transients. Those are not a function of the music or musicianship.
My questions are:
- What is a 'transient'?
- What is a 'leading edge'?
I agree with Brad - it is audible. What is it that audio circuitry imparts that causes people to say there is a 'bite' at the start of a note, or to say the start of a note is "soft" or "rolled off". In the "Natural Sound" thread I suggested either is tied to a weak fundamental or lack of harmonics. That would be some sort of a frequency distortion, a problem of tonality?
As a character of a particular piece of gear I'd say this is an overlay, a homogenization.
Peter seems to be suggesting the 'effect' is tied to the listener. Is it?
As suggested, "it" is audible. I've used these terms in reviewing and people seem to understand what I describe. Now, I'm not so sure what it is I"m describing.