It seems that the concensus here is that most people like their music really loud.
I wonder if the poll was conducted among classical music listeners if the results would be the same.
That’s as loud as I try to listen now to save my old guy ears. I do like it loud like a lot of the concerts I’ve attended over the years. To me The Who doesn’t sound as good at quiet listening levels. Live at Leeds is played at 60-70 dBA now. Don’t want to think about how loud I used to listen to it. I also wear earplugs now at concerts. |
I normally listen at a 70db average with percussive or fff to ffff passages reaching 80 to 90db. I find this level enjoyable and not triggering sever adverse reactions from my wife and family members (no dedicated listening room, formal living room serves as listening room). However, they may still react to louder peaks. This is below mid orchestra/front first tier seating where the average sound level is 70 to 90db with peaks of over 100db (see references and my own iPhone measurements that are not posted, as inaccurate as they are). When in the mood for reproducing the concert experience, I will raise the average to a 90db level. Rock concerts average 100db and 120db peaks. I do not find that enjoyablevat a concert or in my home. See some peer reviewed literature: https://iris.who.int/bitstream/handle/10665/352277/9789240043114-eng.pdf?sequence=1 https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC7050229/ https://www.chicagotribune.com/2004/01/11/the-decibel-debate-sound-and-the-symphony/
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