Hello Rwbadley, True resolution will always let you you hear more venue information, you will hear more of the space within the space. It will also increase the texture density of the instruments making their images sound more "real" and lifelike. You will hear more of the tone within the tone, the harmonics that make that tone vibriant and so full of life. When you experience it you'll know. For me it's "magic". Don't be fooled by the false detail of a hot treble or forward midrange. As Jayctoy said it will become fatiguing and the character of the coloration will be apparent with all of your recordings. All the best! Tom
So, is it Clarity or Brightness?
I've recently made some changes in the system that have increased clarity immensely. I'm hearing things on recordings that were never there before. This is quite a pleasure and revelation.
This increased clarity may be somewhat at the expense of the sense of warmth that I would like to achieve. Is it possible to have incredible clarity while still retaining some of the smoothness? When does clarity cross the line to brightness? If the system is well balanced in all frequency areas, can it still have gaps?
If the recipe, ingredients and technique are high quality, how could the soup turn out less than stellar?
RW
This increased clarity may be somewhat at the expense of the sense of warmth that I would like to achieve. Is it possible to have incredible clarity while still retaining some of the smoothness? When does clarity cross the line to brightness? If the system is well balanced in all frequency areas, can it still have gaps?
If the recipe, ingredients and technique are high quality, how could the soup turn out less than stellar?
RW