bluegrassphile
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Deleted. Bad idea for a thread.
Deleted. Bad idea for a thread.
Thanks, Dave. I appreciate your understanding. I think I'll wander on over to the Audiogon Forum. Never any controversy there. :rofl:
The really kooky ones are at Audioholics and that other site that measures stuff but never says anything about how it sounds.go over to 'Audio Asylum', that's where the real kooks hang out !
Blind listening/tests/comparisons are always frustrating as they break through the illusions we build up in this hobby. I have done it ad nauseam with friends and our systems over the decades. It is hardly ever an event that confirms anything but the opposite. Unless one makes drastic changes such as speakers/rooms, the rest are pretty difficult to nail down blind. Heck, even professional violin players are fooled by a cheap modern violin in a blind comparison to a coveted, multimillion dollar Stradivarius and they have professionally trained ears and talent. What chance does an average audiophile have? LOL...
Best to just assemble a system with whatever components bring listening joy and spend countless happy hours listening to favorite music rather than chasing some absolutes that are mostly our vivid imagination to begin with. Audible (auditory/echoic )memory only lasts 2-4 seconds. Scientific fact. After that brief moment, it is our imagination... Good luck swapping cables and trying to hear a difference.
Echoic memory has nothing to do with "events" but sound. If one makes an argument that they would recognize "the voice" of a loved one, sure, you can, there are many cues in a spoken word and the human voice. Of course everyone would recognize popular songs by Diana Krall instantly but I seriously doubt any audiophile would recognize Diana Krall if she called on the phone... A percentage of the population, nearly 4% in fact, cannot recognize voices of even loved ones. The memory fails them and the condition is called "phonagnosia".Event Memory , 2 seconds Huh , you must not be married ....!
Blind testing (abx) works, works very well if not done with prejudice, volume matching is very important in both sighted or unsighted compares ...!
Regards
The really kooky ones are at Audioholics and that other site that measures stuff but never says anything about how it sounds.
You mean they don't like to talk about the 'chocolatey mids and the euphoric highs' !
Like any forum, one learns to separate those with an ounce of knowledge and those that don't really know the forest for the trees. Audiophiles are no exception !
Echoic memory has nothing to do with "events" but sound. If one makes an argument that they would recognize "the voice" of a loved one, sure, you can, there are many cues in a spoken word and the human voice. Of course everyone would recognize popular songs by Diana Krall instantly but I seriously doubt any audiophile would recognize Diana Krall if she called on the phone... A percentage of the population, nearly 4% in fact, cannot recognize voices of even loved ones. The memory fails them and the condition is called "phonagnosia".
But even our "event" memory is fallible. That is simply because the memory is not a bit for bit perfect information stored on a hard drive... Our memories are an "overlay", an abstract picture that gets created by the brain when the memory is pulled from storage. Many of the details can easily change within the construct of that abstract memory recreation.
Why any audiophile would think they can precisely recall the details of a complex recording and compare/contrast based on a memory that does not even last more than a few seconds is beyond me. Then the audiophiles go on to proclaim something "better" or "worse" without having a frame of reference what the original recording sounded like in the studio or what the instrument or a bunch of instruments within a recording should sound like without musical training and pitch perfect hearing is also beyond me. But I've stopped pondering such things and simply enjoy music. If another shiny box interests me for whatever reason, so be it, it is part of enjoying the hobby.
Too bad you don't quit posting things you have read that are all negative
Funny, I took Serge's post more as a 'here's the facts', again something many audiophiles can't accept
Too bad you don't quit posting things you have read that are all negative while you "simply enjoy the music" that you can't remember for more than a few seconds.