How do you listen?


I listen to a lot of (classical) music. Most of the time I try to listen at concert hall volumes (really loud) so as to try and recreate the feeling I have  being in the hall.  But  recently I’ve discovered I can get satisfaction listening at moderate levels.  There is a certain relaxed quality to listening this way, and sometimes I think I hear more of what’s in the music.
How do you listen?
128x128rvpiano
1+ oregonpapa, it has to do with our ears frequency response changing with volume and the volume at which the music was mixed at. If the music was mixed at a lower volume if you play it back at high volume it will be too bright. If it was mixed at high volume and you play it back at low levels it will sound dull with no bass. The "right" volume is somewhat different between systems. I like live rock recordings to sound and feel as if I am at the concert so I keep the very bottom end below 80 Hz boosted at a rate of 6 dB/oct. This gives me the sensation of being at a live concert at lower levels that won't hurt my ears.

Our ears accommodate to volume. The smallest muscle in your body called the stapedius tightens up on the stapes, the bone that vibrates your inner ear as the volume rises. It takes a few minutes for this to happen. It is therefore always important to warm your ears up. I start at about 80 dB and add 2 db or so every two or three minutes until I get up to 95 dB. This gives the stapedius time to tighten up and protect your inner ear from noise induced damage. This is also why impulse noise like gun shots is the worst to cause hearing damage as your ears have not had time to warm up.
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Speaking as a music lover first, and an audiophile a distant second, I’ve discovered that each recording has its own proper volume setting in order to attain the best possible sound quality and emotional connection with the music.
Louder on headphones than on speakers as I wish to remain in my apartment! But I generally prefer 'really loud' at the venue itself rather than the sound reproduction....