Mutually inclusive.
Are you hearing the instruments or the music?
I find that as my system is warming up, it sounds pretty good. The instruments sound as I would expect instruments to sound. The imaging is great and the bass is distinct, clear, and powerful. I appreciate the accurate and extended dynamics. But over time, like an hour or so, I find myself not listening to instruments, but rather to music. I slip into it unconsciously. It would likely be faster with class AB amps.
This is the end goal of audio. Just being able to listen to music. Horns, planars, dynamics, tubes, transistors, etc. are all capable of accomplishing this, just in different flavors. For some, a JBL Bluetooth speaker gets them to their “music place” and so there is clearly a personal and idiosyncratic aspect to this. But it supports the notion that all a system has to do is get you there.
This is also how I know if a change makes a difference. Does it do no harm or does it add or detract from the sense of music? Going from Takatsukis to Western Electrics was more music, not as much instrument. Some might say analytical versus warm, but that’s not what’s important. And for some, analytical might be their music.
If your system delivers instruments well but does not carry you to music land, at least occasionally because some recordings are better at this than others, you might consider changing something.
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This is one of the interesting threads that has attracted me to this place. Please correct me if I am misunderstanding you, but I see them as attempting to explore what it is we like about listening to music - the visceral experience of it. I was trying to get at the same thing from a different angle with a thread I started recently on warm up. Others that I would put in the same category are those on the sound of vinyl and altered states of consciousness. I think I’ve already quoted Frank Zappa, who said something along the lines of “writing about music is like dancing about architecture.” It’s still a worthy exercise, even though no one has quite nailed it yet.
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Another way to say it is that instruments are in the cognitive domain but music is in the affective domain. If you start dancing, that would be the psychomotor domain. https://academicaffairs.sonoma.edu/sites/academicaffairs/files/blooms_all_domains.pdf |
- 25 posts total