If your notion that room humidity and air pressure alter our perception of sound is true then I am afraid we'll just never be able to reproduce musical recordings "as they heard it" faithfully, regardless of how much money we throw at the problem, since I am unaware of any commercial release which denotes the humidity and air pressure of the control room used where they made their various mixing and mastering decisions, so we can't replicate those conditions in our playback rooms.
Oh well, this was a fun hobby while it lasted. Bye all. See you at our next hobby's forum!
Also on a more serious note, I never wrote my goal was to "hear it the way they did". My goal, again, is to buy distribution mediums/electronics/wires that faithfully reproduce their input signal, hence my best shot at also correctly hearing the master tape (when played on a theoretically perfect tape playback machine). How they happened to mangle
that sound in the studio before it reached their ears by their use of junky little monitors, poorly placed, in a rotten control room, while they were inebriated, with a certain humidity and air pressure, etc., is all downstream stuff unrelated to what I seek.
Additionally I never claimed
my playback environment (including speakers and room acoustics) was perfect so there's lots of sound mangling on
my end too. I disagree with the common notion however that since there are so many stages of sound adulteration on their end and our end that we should instead just give up and accept that everything is flawed hence we should mix and match flaws until we get a balance of them we personally find pleasing. Example of this sort of reasoning I personally disagree with: "I bought these speakers because their particular sound synergistically works well with the sound of my particular tube amp" [paraphrased]