@PeterA - we've talked offline about the "natural sound" (NS) topic but I have a few new thoughts. Mainly gripes, I suppose. One, the pursuit of NS at times (not
all the time) almost reads like a religion where a large swath of modern audiophile products are now categorically dismissed. Natural good; hi-fi bad. And while I certainly agree that it's very easy to do more harm than good with a whole lot of what's out there and wouldn't touch a lot of it with a 10-foot pole, I also feel like usual discussion has been thwarted: "It sounds more like live music", to a large degree, has become a replacement for descriptive comparisons, and in the process discussion and sharing of specific sound attributes is lost. It almost reminds me of the "you just need to have faith" response from religious fundamentalists when asked to explain the unexplainable. Discussion just sort of dies right there. This is undesirable. I would like to see the usual discussions around things like tone, attack, decay, etc described as folks "tweak" towards what they consider to be NS. That'll keep discussion alive, help others understand the effect of these tweaks, and determine if they're worth pursing in their own systems. But it's almost as if these sorts of discussion have now crept dangerously and uncomfortably into the hi-fi realm for the NS enthusiasts. Perhaps I'm wrong. Perhaps it's true, but just not to the degree that I'm sensing. Or perhaps it's just all too satisfying to be above the fray (which I can understand!). Second, is the notion of "tweaking" vs "de-tweaking". I have to agree with those who feel that "tweaking" for NS is more to the point than "de-tweaking". I know first hand that it does feel good at times when replacing an overpriced audiophile product with an inexpensive alternative results in a preferable result. Examples include replacing air bladder bases with cheap steel plates, replacing in-wall Romex or JPS with a specific stranded wire, utilizing decades old vintage copper wire as interconnect or speaker cables. Nothing wrong with any of this. All valid stuff. But they are tweaks that influence the sonic outcome nonetheless. The notion that these changes are a "de-tweak" implies to me one or possibly two things: (1) This new widget is really the baseline / starting point, and going beyond it is a tweak. This to me is false as this widget is one of many inexpensive alternatives or baselines, which has be chosen specifically for its sound. (2) "If it sounds more natural then it's more neutral". And, of course, moving to a less neutral product is therefore a tweak. Someone earlier in the thread noted that of course one is going to classify their own preferred product as the neutral point of a coloration spectrum. That's a very good point. As for Jeff Day, I am guilty of not having read this particular article yet. I know who he is, and am fairly certain that his definition of "natural" doesn't align with my own. I believe tinned copper Duelund wire and many of his
tweaks are not so much "natural" as they are "romantic" sounding, based on personal experience with some of them. I'll get around to reading this article nonetheless. That's all for now...