You're probably listening too loud


After many years of being a professional musician and spending hundreds of hours in the recording studios on both sides of the glass, I believe that most listeners undermine the pleasure of the listening experience by listening too loud and deadening their ears.

As a resident of NYC, there are a million things here that make the ears shut down, just the way pupils close up in bright light. People screaming, trucks, subways, city noise. Your ears keep closing up. Then you go home and try to listen on the hifi, but your ears are still f'kd up to get to the point. Try this experiment.

Hopefully, you can all have some degree of quiet when you can sit down and listen. Start with a record or CD of acoustic music with some inner detail and tonality. I like to use the Naim CD with Forcione and Hayden, or the piano/bass CD with Taylor/Hayden. Just simple, relaxing music. Real instruments doin' real things.

Start by sitting back and leaving the volume just a little lower than you find comfortable. Just like you want to turn it up a bit, but leave it down. Sit back and relax. I would bet that in 7-10 minutes, that "too low" volume is going to sound much louder. That's because you're ears have opened up. Now, without changing anything, that same volume is going to sound right. Step out of the room for a second, but don't talk with anybody. Just go get a glass of water and come back - now, that same volume is going to sound louder than you thought.

Sit back down and listen for a minute or two - now, just the slightest nudge of the volume control upwards will make the sound come alive - the bass will be fuller and the rest of the spectrum will be more detailed and vibrant.

Try it - every professional recording engineer knows that loud listening destroys the subtleties in your hearing. Plus, lower volumes mean no or less amplifier clipping, drivers driven within their limits and ears that are open to receive what the music has to offer.

Most of all - have fun.
chayro
Good points Detlof and Shadorne. The real instruments are dynamic and have overtones and (don't forget) undertones depending upon which instruments and notes you are talking about. Cello or Acoustic guitar will sound louder in lower mid, since undertones extends in the bass region. Similar to violins (as Shadorne mentioned) have overtones sounding louder than fundamentals. So then it goes back to proper and 'complete tones' reproduced cleanly by a system ( that can do that) will sound actually louder while listening. When you measure actual SPL, it is not that loud (numbers) at all. I measure when my daughter plays a guitar. the sound fills up a room, but when measured, it is a 'low' number relative to what you thought it might be. Drums (and some wind instruments) are different story. They do go high in SPL in real life, when struck hard. But when using light strokes, it sounds loud due to tones/undertones/overtones SPL differences.

This phenomena is one of the main reasons why some system sounds (close to) real and most don't.
Interesting to see that many here listen at lower levels as they've aged , you'd thing if we were losing are hearing we'd have the levels up .
We listen at lower levels because we don't want to get our hearts pumping and blood pressure up (not without the cardiologists permission).

Actually, I have found that I like listening at lower volume. I have gravitated toward tube gear and horn-based systems and these are much better sounding at low volume than at high volume levels.