Good read, Paul.
I often try to describe what hear using accepted, popular phrases where appropriate:
http://www.head-fi.org/a/describing-sound-a-glossary
This list alleges stipulative definitions for many of the cliches. If an accepted term offers clarity, than I would say use it. But, on the other hand - I like Paul's practice of saying that for a claim about sound to be valid, you must ask yourself if the opposite can be true. If so the initial claim is probably esoteric mumbo-jumbo.
So, if you describe a speaker's performance as... deftly nimble, able to scurry into a hole in the wall with a chunk of cheese before the trap is sprung. Then, you cannot in the very next paragraph describe that same set of speakers as a pacyderm with a penchant for peanuts.
This is why I don't care much for highly esoteric audio descriptions. I find myself lost in meaningless analogs.
But, I did have an
epiphany last night while laying back listening to my current favourite headphone rig.
My night-time ritual is to decide what Dac/Amp I'll use with what pair of headphones and then I sink into my bed in a trancelike state that only heroin junkies or audiophiles can relate to.
I decided just last night before falling asleep, enveloped in the details of Yo-Yo Ma's rendition of Two Mules for Sister Sara... that "this"... THIS... is all I need.
Damn my other headphone setups. Forget the middling kits I have for work, for walks... none of it matters, because it's not this. They all might as well be wireless earbuds - which are pretty good, but in that moment my epiphany was that "pretty good" is the best it gets when it's not... "this".
Mere words fail to describe impact the bitter-sweet tonality of that song had on me in that moment. Yo Yo Ma's cello doing Ennio Morricone over my Audeze LCD-3 headphones plugged into a pairing of - Emotiva DC-1 DAC - Antique Sound Lab headphone amplifier. Words are meaningless, because I realized that "this" sound didn't just leave me wanting more, it left me wanting nothing else.