How does excessive sibilance measure?


I am super sensitive to excessive sibilance as I am sure most of us are, but I know very little about whether this can be formally measured on test equipment like one sees in Stereophile's reviews. I do know, however, that it is about much more that simple frequency boosts in the sibilant range. Are there any techies out there than can shed light on this?
bojack

Showing 1 response by onhwy61

The most common cause of sibilance is that it's embedded in the recording due to vocalist technique, non-optimal microphone choice or positioning. Sibilant sounds are a normal part of speech and are characterized by louder than average sound centered around 8kHz.

For music playback a key element for not making sibilance any worse than what's already on the record is to use equipment that can properly handle transients at various SPLs. That's a non-trivial task. Speakers that have off axis peaks in the sibilant range should also be avoided.