Top two most important sound qualities


In case you didn't know, it's 2023 and this website still hasn't implemented a polling feature, so I can't define a selection of sound qualities to choose from and see results in a grouped, organized fashion. Boo hoo!

 

If you had to pick two of the typically referenced sound qualities that are most important to you to optimizing the enjoyment of your system, what are they? You know what I mean, right? Could be a certain frequency range and some particular quality that you for in it, or any quality that applies across all frequencies, etc.

(Note: "Sound qualities" mentioned here do not include anything that refers to physical attributes of your system or listening room, such as acoustical treatments, types of components, types of source material, physical tweaks, etc. It's only a reference to subjectively appreciated qualities.)

128x128gladmo

@waytoomuchstuff ....scorching brows is easy (wayyy too highs of all sorts), cracking plaster is the subs laid on their sides 'gainst the walls...

Now, shattered sheetrock?

A 'renovation scheme' that underlies:

All you need

Is POWER.

Watts up?

Lots...and then some. :)

Anyway....Just carrying on whilst being carried away...*G*

Personally (Is there really an Other?  Doubt it...), like to play the genre and the cut the way I feel it's meant to be...got some flexibility to do so, so I do... *S*

Got to keep the radiators radiated and dusted in any case...

Anyway....back to the regularly scheduled program... J out

I just think you need to like it.   There's so much confirmation bias, escalation of commitment, and subjectivity that it's scarcely possible to say what's really going on here. The continual upgrading turned me off eventually. 

The system should be suited to the space, it should be something I can live with.  It should play the kind of music I listen to most well. I don't want a system that dominates the room from an interior design perspective. 

Ultimately, I feel that the key component is to acknowledge the diminishing rate of return and to isolate oneself from the ongoing dissatisfaction that reading web forums brings.  I glance at the digest for this one and comment once a month at most. 

We've got a couple of Omega systems running off small tube amps with discreet subs and I think I am done with audio purchases forever. They sound great with the kind of indy folk stuff we listen to.  Mids matter most because that's where most of the information is anyways. 

 

@bdp24 

Most loudspeakers sound comically "small" to me, the image of a grand piano, for example, being reduced to a miniature of it’s actual size.

 

Good point. I guess we don't expect lifesize image from HiFi because 99% of the systems we have ever heard don't have it. 

I graduated from bookshelf speakers to floorstanders and then 15  inch dual concentrics and whilst each one got better in this regard none of them have life sized imagery.

 

@panzrwagn 

Effortlessness - that sense of ease that allows you to forget about the hardware and just hear the music.

 

That's another easy one to forget.

Real music doesn't sound forced or strained but many systems do.

You probably need the right combination of loudspeaker and amplifier to get that sense of ease.

Usually that means bigger and more powerful.