Hi Dave,
Yes, you asked me politely whether it was okay to post this, and I even urged you to do it because I think it is *very* valuable.
Before responding to your findings, I'd like to do a bit of high-flying first :
People who read this, may think "oh well, this is his speakers and his amps a and his room, and his DAC and I don't even like nos-DACs". Blabla.
IMHO, people thinking like that, won't proceed much on things. BUT, it takes a very special skill to be able to look through all these variables, with one common denomenator only : XXHihgEnd. I
think I can do that, and what it needs further is recognizing judgements like yours Dave - in consistency. Maybe difficult to explain, but if you mention a characteristic A and also a characteristic B, I would know they always go together, so if you indeed mention A and B, I'd know you just must be right. Unaccording the speakers and all you use.
What others from above could learn, is that *anyone's* sayings should never be distrusted. But okay, once the person saying it is in the environment of trustees
. I mean, you certainly don't hear me say that I'd listen to any one word of x.xxx+ posters on AA, to name one. But it's easy to judge ... for me it is.
Ok, landed again, and what I write below, I already wrote yesterday, so the "yesterday's" in there, are "day before yesterday" by now.
Note that I did *not* listen to 0.9d when I wrote this. But I think I can do without. As an absolute judgement of 0.9h then ...
Paper like drums …
I fully agree with that. At first thought (say, 10 CDs or so) this was my major idea of more natural voicing. The first attack of drums just IMO are rather like that. But at second thoughts (the next 50 CDs …) there body missing from the drums.
I’d say that 0.9h is more accurate, which is from the applied theories in the player, and which I also seem to hear. “Accurate” also comes to my brain as more tinny. So another general remark of myself would be “more tinny sound”.
What I applied with 0.9h opposed to 0.9d is two counteractive directions : one of more accuracy and one of less (mixed two different approaches). Possibly it combines in a strange way.
Like phase got out of wack
Actually this is the most interesting. Why ? well, since many times it occurred to me that the phase was out of order at drum hits. I never experienced that before.
Sidenote : this is dangerous though, because since the latest 0.9h I have been working on absolute phase control, and it well might be so that I “learned” to pay attention to these things. I have been thinking about this just because I noticed the drum hits, and it’s my conclusion that it’s just there, and I’m not disturbed by it because of the “learning to hear it” process. But still dangerous.
organics
Pwew, if only more people would understand that.
A better expression than analogue I think.
Teh pinpoint imaging is more about losing the bloom around the instruments rather than accurate soundstage.
I’m not sure whether your writing can’t be clearly understood by me, but if I try to translate it for myself :
Something like pinpoint imaging does not exist with value (for audio) if it would come to one, say, square (or cubic) inch of space somewhere in front you. An instrument most often expresses the sounds from larger sufaces (like violin), and
a an area of 1 square inch where sound emerges would be far too large to express the instrument
b within 1 square inch the e.g. violin can’t be expressed.
So think of the representation of the instrument in your space (coming from speakers) as many points in space for the one instrument.
When the, say, 30 x 20 x 5 inches needed for that are now expressed as 1x1x1, the instrument is pinpointed the most separate from the others, but it would be no instrument …
It would be the opposite of organic, and it would be better expressed as digital. Not for squary sound, but for perceived “too much accuracy”.
Wrong …
This is not accurate at all. It’s the overshoot of, say, too bloomy.
Sometimes the upper mids jump out (not much) but don't stay in place like with D.
Yesterday I have been listening for a full CD to music with bagpipes. It occurred to me that this may be a better instrument to judge equal tonality than a piano, just because it occurred to me that it wasn’t so much equal al all. This *is* dangerous, because I can imagine that the horn speakers are use are prone to resonating as a response to these nasal squarish sounds, but it is again something of which I thought : this does not fit.
Later I ran a CD of Joe Henry (never heard of him really, but I found him in the CD rack), and by pure coincidence or not, his voice is in the same areas the bagpipes were unequal and it sounded just bad. Mind you, a guy like this comes to you as one with an irritating voice, but since I have the experience from before (with I think London Beat), this just is not so. Something is just wrong.
It is really un-be-lieve-a-ble what mismatches in this area can do to a person’s voice and the recognition of it. When the mismatch has gone, the person sings 1 octave or so lower ! So all what was creating the irritating voice, were over expressed harmonics.
I feel like D holds the notes/voice longer than H
Many, many times I felt like words were abbreviated. That too, did not occur to me before.
Besides that, also many times I could clearly hear the opposite of the bagpipe thing : frequencies are underexposed. Thus, apart from words abbreviated, it occurs to me that parts of words just fail. That too, I did not hear before.
H sounds tilted up in pitch almost
Not almost, I think it is true, incurred by harmonic distortion.
Btw, the disbelievers of software being able to change the sound just by being (in)correct must be rolling on the floor by now. :lol:
I will put up a new version that undoes the part of the theoretical less accuracy (“theoretical” because I know it does influence, but because of combinations with other things changed, it is hard to predict the “direction” at the other end (say, the speakers).
I will not undo all, because I *have* to learn what does what.
Btw remember, more accurate should always be better, since I believe that the most accurate will e.g. let bloom the instrument as realistic as possible.
Thus, the above I wrote yesterday. I can now add a few things to it.
Sidenote : the bagpipes I mention are a coincidence, because they weren't mentioned in your original writing to me.
I decided to add the remainder of what I can say in another post.
Peter