I picked up on that in a different
thread.
Fremer enjoys (and promotes) audiophile 'effects' - sonics more likely heard in a listening room than a concert hall. His reference tends to be other equipment.
Hello Tim, I agree that Fremer focuses on audiophile effects in his reviews. He also tends to refer to other gear instead of to live music and the way real instruments sound. I suspect he and other reviewers are conflicted. The readers ask for comparisons, and this often leads to a discussion about effects and the other gear being compared. Which component brings out more detail, which has a blacker background?
I think there is a way to accomplish both goals. One can compare two turntables by making digital recordings for quick and easy direct comparisons and also describe which turntable sounds more like real music and why. And then the reviewer can go into why the other turntable does not sound as much like real music. The problem, as I see it, is that the reviewer's job is easier and the writing seems more interesting and full of content when everything is broken down into parts and sonic attributes rather than a comparison to the larger picture of the sound of music. And the reader has been conditioned to understand the sound of components and systems by these attributes and the glossary of terms.
I think there is a real opportunity here, with some effort, to reexamine how reviews are approached and what they should communicate. It is a real challenge and I am skeptical that such a shift will take place, but it is possible, IMO. Car and appliance reviews are about performance, function, build quality and sometimes aesthetics. Audio gear reviews can be about those things too, but they can be be about much more. Audio gear and systems are tools to help us experience a music performance from the past. It is about emotion and art and the appreciation of greater things. We all share the reference to live music, and audio reviews should help us to understand whether or not the reviewer thinks the product under review brings us closer to the sound of real music.
What does the "blacker background" of one turntable compared to another really tell us about how a component brings a system closer to the sound of the real thing? It may seem that one turntable is more forensic in its analysis of the information in the grooves, but it can also mean that it is more damped than the other table. It does a better job of eliminating noise that can obscure resolution. However, if eliminating noise is the result of overdampening a component, it may also obscure information like the ambient energy that remains in space after the bow touches the strings of a cello and the body amplifies the vibrations. As long as that energy exists in the hall and can be heard by the audience, there is no black background.
The audience waits to applaud as the conductor very slowly lowers his arms at the end of the final movement. I have often thought that this is because the conductor is waiting for the last remnants of energy to dissipate and turn to silence marking the end of the piece. This takes time. I almost never hear that silence anywhere during the music, not even between movements when there is shifting and motions from the musicians and audience. Total silence in a concert hall is rare.
I want to read why a reviewer thinks blacker backgrounds are good, and what they have to do with the live listening experience. Is it because the component does a better job of lowering noise? Does it increase natural resolution? Or do the starker images and bolder sound come at the expense of the subtler stuff, the stuff that makes us think the reproduction is alive and real?
In a good concert hall, I hear music clearly, but it is not the clarity that comes from seeing more detail under a microscope's lens. It is the clarity of the energy from the instruments coming together to form the bigger picture of the music's message. It is the beauty of a great orchestra playing well together. It is the genius of the composer interpreted by the conductor and musicians. I want to know which turntable gets me closer to that and why.