FTR I performed my own measurements with an Earthworks microphone and a low distortion analyser.
I haven't read the entire book but I have read excerpts as well as many of his forum posts. Like most people with an audio system I've spent a reasonable amount of time trying to get the best possible sound at the listening chair, and to that end I regard his work as an invaluable reference. It definitely can't hurt to have some understanding of speaker and listening room interactions, to the point of being able to predict what tonal colorations are likely, but we're also fortunate these days to have an abundance of low cost tools to perform measurements and simulations.
But how valid is the comparison between an instrument and a speaker, when the two radiate sound energy in very different ways?
FWIW, I constructed my own convolver filter from live measurements to correct a dominant room mode at 38Hz and it made a big difference; removing a bass boom issue that was negatively impacting many recordings. However, high frequency reflections are not necessarily as measurable as they are audible, due to the fact that they impact more on time domain performance.
I tend not to use much in the way of sound absorption treatment, but there are curtains, carpet and sofas etc that do reduce mid and high frequency reflections.[/QUOTE
My original posting was referring to room/speaker frequency response measurements. So I took your comments about reflections in that measurement context. You will have a first reflection from the ceiling (notably for a typical eight foot one). This does affect FR measurement. If you did your ceiling treatment for some other reason, that was not clear to me. Toole’s book does not discuss much about ceiling treatment, but does state “...numbers and graphs are not always simply or logically related to what we hear”.
This plays to my point in the context of the OP. I can tell you I have heard great sound in setups that were never measured and had no room treatment or any frequency/time domain processing. While there is some substantial science about improving sound at low frequencies, beyond that, the answers are more complex as recording quality and psychoacoustics play more significant roles. In this case however, reflections are an essential part of how we localize sound. This is true whether the source is a speaker, a musical instrument or a mechanical noise. So, while in favor of science, when there is scientific uncertainty, I admit I rely on what sounds good to me.
Ww