Shifting absolutes


I read Mr Valin's recent review of the Raidho 4.1. Previously, I was under the impression that the absolute sound was based on neutrality and fidelity to the source material. Now I read that the ultimate loudspeaker incorporates various distortions (bass bumps, damped highs and the like) designed to enhance the sound of the source material. As per Mr Valin, if we obtain these speakers, we will likely need to install extra bass traps and play with port plugs, in order to tame the distortions that were intentionally incorporated into the speaker design. This is all presented so logically and with such confidence. Am I missing something?
psag

Showing 1 response by dkarmeli

What everyone on this thread fails to realize is the Mr. Valin's system like most reviewers is in a constant state of flux and their comments include the current system under review. Room which includes your power plays a huge role in the over all sound of any system. Every new speaker in the system has its own set of peculiarities in any given room and takes time fine tune the setup even with a known system, imagine doing it constantly with new pieces of equipment that you just installed. Reviewers like Jonathan have a limited time to spend with most equipment and behemoths like Raidho 4.1 pose additional challenges to the average room and even physically for the reviewer who has to move them around, not easy at all.

You have to keep in mind that everything is relative to the moment and the difficult job the reviewer has at hand. He's writing for a public with varying degrees of experience and he has to masterfully convey in words, his observations, probably time restricted, and subjective emotional experience which has a lot value to this public. Not an easy job! If you read the review carefully, there aren't any contradictions, you get the objective side based on what he heard in his room, your mileage will vary based on your system and room, and his subjective listening which given the man's experience counts more than the rest for me. There are no absolutes!

Nonoise - HP didn't leave, he was forced to go. As an industry member who has dealt with him in the past I can assure that he was more of a fiction writer than an unbiased reviewer. AS is a much better magazine without him and the current management is far more respectable than he ever was.
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