Go to a concert to hear an artist three nights in a row and you will undoubtedly have a favorite of the three. Now go and listen to the same artist and three different venues and again you will have a favorite.
Same artist every time...which was the golden ears/musically perfect event for you? Would it be the same even for others? If a survey were done and there was a majority preferred event, could that sound be replicated in the future with DSP tailored to the specific venue?
Early in this hobby, I cared about golden ear equipment and golden ear opinions....not so much any more. To paraphrase Terry London....its the goosebumps that matter.
But that doesn't mean that golden ears aren't important. Designers need to be able to correlate golden ear sound, with the sound they are proposing to market and with sound that buyers will actually buy.
The Harman work as well as the work of others that are trying to correlate various aspects of sound with preferences is important...but so is knowing that we all have biases and these biases may be an important contributor to why some hobbyist are never really satisfied with the sound they have achieved.
Same artist every time...which was the golden ears/musically perfect event for you? Would it be the same even for others? If a survey were done and there was a majority preferred event, could that sound be replicated in the future with DSP tailored to the specific venue?
Early in this hobby, I cared about golden ear equipment and golden ear opinions....not so much any more. To paraphrase Terry London....its the goosebumps that matter.
But that doesn't mean that golden ears aren't important. Designers need to be able to correlate golden ear sound, with the sound they are proposing to market and with sound that buyers will actually buy.
The Harman work as well as the work of others that are trying to correlate various aspects of sound with preferences is important...but so is knowing that we all have biases and these biases may be an important contributor to why some hobbyist are never really satisfied with the sound they have achieved.