Distinctly Different Upgrades. Surprisingly Similar Musical Outcomes?


Deliver more of what you want.  And, less of what you don’t want.  Seems simple enough.

 

I’m not sure about you guys/gals, but it appears that many sonic upgrades produce similar aural characteristics.  When we make something better, the sonic benefits can span a wide terrain regardless of what phenomenon was responsible for the improvements.   I’d like to set aside the quite obvious bandwidth extension created by adding subwoofer(s) or increase in dynamic range from a serious amplification upgrade and concentrate on the improvements created by projecting a more correct version of music information into our listening space.  This could include, but not limited to: cable upgrades, better DACs, AC power delivery, amplification, better (not bigger) speakers, and higher resolution source components/processors.

 

We all have our own ways of defining what happens when a sonic breakthrough happens in our systems.  I certainly have my own words to describe what’s going on in my musical world.  And you all have distinct musical vocabularies of your own.  I use a term I call “pinching the midrange.”  This occurs when the fundamentals of voices and instruments fall off the map and upper midrange is exaggerated when energy/volume levels increase.  This has a cascading effect when poor AC power delivery is the starting point, handed off to inadequate source components, further damaged by poor cabling, made more anemic by not-ready-for-primetime amplification delivered to speakers that don’t have “the boys under the hood” to stay linear at/near concert hall levels.  Improving any aspect of this system would provide a plethora of benefits and would be very similar in many regards.

 

Am I underthinking this a bit?  Or, are any of you experiencing similar outcomes?

 

Thoughts?

 

waytoomuchstuff 

waytoomuchstuff

Showing 2 responses by mahler123

Not really understanding the question here.  This could be because I am home with Covid and a dull headache is making it difficult to concentrate.  I think you are trying to say that certain audio enhancements tend to emphasize stuff around the margins and do so at the expense of messing with the midrange, where most music actually lives.  

When we change something, we can hear a different sound.  We hear stuff on recordings that we may not have noticed before.  Sometimes we may lose something in the process, sometimes not