Have cables become somewhat of a snake-oil topic.


I've invested many tens of thousands in high end 2-channel home audio gear and cables. I'm also a musician who has recorded and created mixes in many of the top recording studios in LA, NY and Nashville. These studios most often use the highest quality power treatment, tube condenser microphones, pre-amps, EQ modules, AD/DA converters, compressors, monitors, etc. Obviously, the goal in a recording studio is to capture the realism of the live studio performance for both vocals and instruments, and create a final mix-down that highlights the natural subtle nuances of the performances of each musician.

With that said, my 20 years of informal research inside these studios says that virtually NONE invest in high priced specially stranded balanced interconnects or speaker cables. Instead, various models of a particular Japanese cable is considered the studio "gold standard" and is WIDELY used in the top studios across the country. Now any good mixing engineer is at least AS interested as any audiophile, in all the audio characteristics and variables we discuss ad nauseum in these A-gon threads. So if recording pros are willing to spend hundreds of thousands on electronics and speakers, to capture the natural and neutral sound of a musician's studio performance, why is it that expensive cabling is seen as the snake oil equivalent in the recording industry. (Moreover, I could go one step further and ask why some home audio D/A converters far exceed the cost of the most sought after professional studio D/A converters?.......we'll leave that for another discussion.)

I DO NOT disagree that substituting a Nordost, Siltech, Cardas or various other high end brands into my personal studio rig do not make a difference. There are indeed audible differences between the brands in terms of bass extension, smoothness, imaging, graininess, etc. However, these DIFFERENCES are not necessarily equivalent to an IMPROVEMENT in capturing the natural/neutral details of a given performance.

(I intentionally will not address the mastering process since that has everything to do with radio and marketing execs commercial sales expectations, rather than a true to life presentation of the musical performances.)
jymc

Showing 1 response by knghifi

Jymc, Just the fact no recording studios you're familiar with use expensive cables, it doesn't mean it won't make a difference. Since you're in the recording business, have you ever compared recordings with different cables?

Bottom line is it doesn't matter anyways. Since we/audiophiles all have different systems, taste ... we are going to use whatever sounds best in OUR systems. Believe it or not, there is an agon member that runs his cables, power conditioners ... in a series to archieve the desire effect. Who am I or anyone tell him it's wrong? Maybe his components need a little dampening?

All this audiophile talk about no coloration, neutral sound, sound staging, etc is an entirely SEPARATE issue from using a cable OR electronic component for the sole purpose of creating a particular sound characteristic that one may personally enjoy, although which MAY OR MAY NOT sound real and natural. This becomes a subjective perception decision for each of us.
No audiophile with 1/2 a brain would believe it. Everything has a sonic characteristics ... even a Lightspeed attuenator! LOL!!!

03-20-13: Elizabeth
I am suprised no one sells cables with the braand name of "Snake Oil". They would have tons of free marketing.
Me Me Me ... Great idea! Sick of my career so maybe I should get into the cable business :-)