
killdozzer
Audioholic Samurai
Here I am, my little heaven
If you were really hardcore you would be buried IN the Dynacos!I will be buried with my Marantz 2245 and Dynaco A25's.
But cables and interconnects DO impart a sound. Without them, you don't have a sound. I'm no golden ears, but that seems like a pretty big difference.that review on both the internet and print that dare tell us that cables and interconnects impart a sound.
Incorrect. They CONDUCT electrical signals to the speaker which converts the electrical signals themselves too sound. Without speakers there would be no sound.But cables and interconnects DO impart a sound. Without them, you don't have a sound. I'm no golden ears, but that seems like a pretty big difference.
Selecting the right low resistance and capacitance speaker cable was also part of the nostalgia and part of the excitement - the new active speakers have taken this away. I don't like active speakers for one single reason - they need to be turned on and off - twice. Oh, and the other single reason is that you can find the perfect looking speaker, but it will probably have a less perfect amplifier in it. Ah, and the other single reason is that tone control becomes difficult unless you have this in a preamp in between the speakers (I don't like remote controls either).Incorrect. They CONDUCT electrical signals to the speaker which converts the electrical signals themselves too sound. Without speakers there would be no sound.
Totally agreeI dread people playing their music to me these days. They connect BT to a small single wireless JBL speaker and play some horrible youtube clips and expect you to fall in a trance together with them on how amazing the sound is.
But their amazement with what just went on with their little squawker tells me they don’t care about it anymore.
Well, I must be a worse person than you are. I don't see agreement in what we write.Totally agree- but It's not that they don't care anymore, it's that they don't know how much better it would sound on an 'Audiophile' system (or they can't afford a better system) - regardless of the claims, a well designed large floor standing loudspeaker, is always going to sound fuller than a well designed bookshelf loudspeaker. Adding a small cheap subwoofer just makes the 'kick drum' sound stratified I think - as if it doesn't really belong to the track.
A lot of active speakers will power down if they sense no signal after awhile. You don't need to turn them off, they turn themselves off.I don't like active speakers for one single reason - they need to be turned on and off - twice. Oh, and the other single reason is that you can find the perfect looking speaker, but it will probably have a less perfect amplifier in it. Ah, and the other single reason is that tone control becomes difficult unless you have this in a preamp in between the speakers (I don't like remote controls either).
Not liking to go off topic, but:Saying that bookshelves are inferior by design, to me, sounds just like those audiophiles saying that bookshelves are the only way to listen to music. Both are extremes.
As far as music goes, they keep coming back to their battery operated squawker.
Just a sidebar, I used to produce radio commercials and thus I have overseen production at several studios in my region, mostly supervision of voice over talent, SFX, and stock music selection; but, on some occasions full jingle production. From this experience I can tell you two things: first, a finished commercial mastered to DAT could indeed be indistinguishable from talent, off mic and sans sound reinforcement, reading commercial's script; and, second, the finished commercial on DAT could be played in my home via a system consisting of very divergent speakers (JBL L100t3's) than those in production studio (Tannoy) and still deliver an impression that the talent was in right there in my home. The bottom-line is I know from my experience in radio commercial production that recorded music can indeed sound exactly like the original performance regardless to it being an acoustic or sound reinforced electronic presentation. The thing is any recording we might be entertained by is not going to relate to personal experience with the orginal performance so we just don't know if what we are listening to sounds real.Not liking to go off topic, but:
Oh, no Killdozzer, both large and small speakers have their place - one is neither better than the other for a certain task, and I'll try to explain this the best I can - to enjoy listening to music as it was recorded, you sort of need to have the exact same small near-field monitors and large far-field speakers in a room that is the same as the control room or the post production suite where it was mixed/EQ'd. This is going to be difficult to achieve in any normal room in any house regardless of 'tuning it' or matching it with the speakers - there is always going to be a degree of 'colouration' we have to live with (which is still pretty good in most cases). Also, recordings never publish what speakers the track was mixed with - so there is no chance.
I can certainly say that the smaller speakers do not sound as full (i.e. extended bass response) as the larger far-field speakers in a studio. If you have ever been in a top studio or post production suite, which I'm sure you may well have, and listened to the sound - you'd agree that it's staggeringly impressive - and I mean, 'staggeringly'. They will mix with both near and far field speakers - therefore, saying one is better than the other, for listening to music, is not right.
They rarely have Subs (some studios do, and some don't), because the far-field speakers are often MASSIVE and could probably extend into the infrasonic range. When you switch over to nearfield with a sub, the sound is a little stratified by comparison, but they test the mix with them because that's the setup one has for watching films etc. Some still test the mix with the old Yamaha NS10S monitors (which is still on-topic I guess) - which are an acoustic suspension design, tighter than a.....tight thing. Some hate them, but I love them because the mix sounds so 'together'.
Nevertheless - this is my opinion and my opinion alone.