Annoying Sibilance=digital glare?


I've slowly been tweaking my system closer and closer to subjective goodness, as we all do, and my most recent addition has left me a bit less than stunned. Swapped out all the interconnects (a mixture of mediocrity) with solid silver from Homegrown Audio (at the price, silly not to at least try it) and the result is a new and annoying sibilance, mainly on female vocals. It's tempting to blame it on the interconnects (sure, blame the newcomers) but I am also tempted to lay some of the blame on my front end, an AH!Tjoeb'99 with upgraded Siemans tubes, which is possibly now confronted with a downstream chain that simply outclasses it. While I’m asking for a diagnosis, here’s what downstream is: VTL 2.5, Bryston 4b-st, (w/ the Homegrown-come-Kimber KGAC knockoff throughout), Kimber Monocle XL, Thiel 2.3. -or- Headroom Home and Sennheiser HD600 - sibilance equally bad in both, if not slightly more annoying on the cans. [Long intro, now for the question:] If I put the old interconnect back between the CDP and the PRE (yes, Monster cable, though I’ve got 2-3 other’s to try as well) and that “cures” my sibilance problem (assuming it might) am I just veiling an inadequacy in the CDP which was finally brought to unacceptable levels by the much more detailed silver cables, or, is it one that we chalk up to “synergy” and declare that silver just don’t belong there? Alternatively, as I am hoping to upgrade my CDP in the not-to-distant future, is this something (the sibilance) that I can expect a new CDP to clear up? And, finally, “digital glare” is a term of art that that I have yet to put a good, first-hand, audible definition on - is that what’s setting my teeth on edge with all this hissing shit? Many thanks, (and I hope someone can make sense of this ramble...)
mezmo
Brakin is important 100/200 hours minimum.silver can be bright in certin systems.I tried a Alpha-Core Silver Cable the lower end one 127.00 list canr remember the name.It added sibilance and made it anoying to listen to.silver is not allways what its cracked up to be.with solid state amps it can be even worse.Give them 200 hours and listen again.
Give the cables the "warm-up" first (patience)... If this doesn't work, change the cables. I have noticed this issue on my gear with Kimber and other Silver cables. I know the $$ is a difference, but Audioquest Anaconda does not do this at all (and is Silver).
Ok, what really surprised me is that I had logged well over 100 hours on these guys (I actually built four pairs and have them liberally scattered throughout the system) and they were, at that point, more or less fine. Then I decided, lord knows why, to switch out the terminators on two pairs (PRE to headphone amp and PRE to main amp) in favor of a locking RCA. (I justified it by reasoning that the connections on the Bryston are a little lose and would therefore benefit from a locking RCA...and while I was doing one pair, might as well do two?). It was only after the switch that I really noticed the damnable sibilance. So, relatively old wires + new termination = start from scratch?!? We'll see whether time mellows the new RCA's, else I might just be tempted to switch them back. Jeeze....
Anything in the signal path may cause this. How good are the locking RCAs?? Different alloy or metal plating combinations can make the same piece of wire sound like a whole different animal when you change connectors (as I'm sure you know at the moment). Solder and mechanical bonding techniques of the wire can also change the sound.