I’m not clear on what you’re asking here. How is reducing the gain different from reducing the volume? I can see how reducing the volume might make an amp/speaker combination sound different at lower SPL, but you're asking a different question. Please clarify.
Gain and volume are often confused. While related, they are not the same, so reducing one is not the same as reducing the other. For me, in most cases, a lower gain/higher volume is preferable to higher gain/ lower volume. Just that difference can make the same speakers sound, react and convey the musical signal differently. The presentation you hear will not be the same.
Hopefully we can dig deeper into this topic.
A loudspeaker’s ability to disperse sound off-axis in a smooth manner (flat frequency response curve), is related to a speaker’s ability to cast a realistic sounding image. So flat frequency response, both on-axis and off-axis, is key in my opinion.
I was referring to pre-amp/amp specifications only (or integrated units to make it easier). I should have been clearer.
Not without the real music first taxing the amp/speaker combination. You would have to first rule out that possibility before being able to conclude that something else, such as a pre-amp, is causing the ‘falls short’ effect.
I'm not sure I follow you here but it seems like you're saying
Yes since some enthusiasts are not going to get the amp on their speakers until after they've looked at the specs for the pre-amp/amp and in most cases they'll only choose one of the amps they were comparing specs on. I think the "first" for some comes in the reading measurements part.
If by this you're thinking of anything close to what gain does in musician's amp, then yes. I did notice that no matter if the volume or SPL is the same, that even in home audio adding gain at preamp stage, changes the all around sound. Given that your preamp has the gain knob.
I don't know the answers to other questions and I'm not an audio engineer.
That's it, we're on the right track.
Could you define what "musician's amp" mean, such as, is it still an amp that is design to simply amplify the input linearly without intended distortions?
Just to be clear, unlike a guitar amp (which I think killdozzer was refering to- only because they commonly have both controls) when I speak of the higher gain setting I'm thinking of a signal that is not clipping. No distortion is being introduced.
Just two clean unclipped signals. One at a higher gain and one at a lower gain setting.