Is "warm" a compliment or a criticism?


I have noticed that when some people describe the sound of equipment as "warm," they mean it in a positive way, while others seem to equate a warm sound with muddiness or lack of detail. What exactly does "warm" mean?

Jeff
jsk49
While Jeffreybehr makes a valid point regarding a possible hump in the FR between 100-300Hz (that could be even "lumpy" for some people) or alternatively a notch in the 2-6kHz region, IME the term "warm" is usually used in a positive vein:
the sound is full "enough" -- i.e. there's sufficient energy but not more than necessary -- in that region.

Mind you, one person's "warm" could be the next person's "lumpy" ESPECIALLY relative to the spl at which this comment is being made: at low spl our ears are less sensitive at 100Hz than they are at 3kHz!
It's usually neither. It is more like a benchmark as with dead neutral as the center. Krell preamps have had the reputation as being stark, cool, tremendous base slam. Where the top end Classe preamp, has been descriped as warm, rounded,laid back similar to Rowland equipment. None of the aforementioned descriptions are positive or negative, just a positioning on the neutral continum. It does turn into a negative when a Reviewer states that the sound was too cool or too warm. As in most things who is to say what is dead neutral. Everyone has their own perspective of what a system is supposed to sound like. Whether your system is yin or yang, if your tapping your feet to the music, who cares.
Gunbei, Are you having a Wierd Science kinda day? All your posts are Female Part's related? Feet, Curves, Etc... Could get somewhat Warm if your sitting in front of your computer with a Wonder-Bra on your head, designing the Perfect Woman.
Audiobugged, actually your picture of me is a lot closer to the mark than you think. It's what I do for a living. Sans the bra on my head. Heheh.