Musings from old school on High Fidelity


Old interview in Stereophile of JA interviewing G Holt.

Do you see any signs of future vitality in high-end audio?

Vitality? Don't make me laugh. Audio as a hobby is dying, largely by its own hand. As far as the real world is concerned, high-end audio lost its credibility during the 1980s, when it flatly refused to submit to the kind of basic honesty controls (double-blind testing, for example) that had legitimized every other serious scientific endeavor since Pascal. [This refusal] is a source of endless derisive amusement among rational people and of perpetual embarrassment for me, because I am associated by so many people with the mess my disciples made of spreading my gospel. For the record: I never, ever claimed that measurements don't matter. What I said (and very often, at that) was, they don't always tell the whole story. Not quite the same thing.

Remember those loudspeaker shoot-outs we used to have during our annual writer gatherings in Santa Fe? The frequent occasions when various reviewers would repeatedly choose the same loudspeaker as their favorite (or least-favorite) model? That was all the proof needed that [blind] testing does work, aside from the fact that it's (still) the only honest kind. It also suggested that simple ear training, with DBT confirmation, could have built the kind of listening confidence among talented reviewers that might have made a world of difference in the outcome of high-end audio.

Yet you achieved so much, Gordon.

I know I did, and my whole excuse for it—a love for the sound of live classical music—lost its relevance in the US within 10 years. I was done in by time, history, and the most spoiled, destructive generation of irresponsible brats the world has ever seen. (I refer, of course, to the Boomers.)

High Fidelity means REPRODUCTION with as little distorion and color as possible and a flat neutral FR within the range of human hearing that retains as much of the original source as possible. This day and age we have the ability to come close but we have chosen the path where High Fidelity means whatever subjective opinion I choose. It might be what one prefers but it isn't HiFi.
djones51
"...and Heaven is in your mind...."

It still comes to what constitutes one's Heaven, and the ways and means one applies to attain It...

There seems (mho) to be a 'doubt' function in play....

I doubt my speakers are reproducing what they should....
I wonder if my cables are introducing distortion...
Is that DAC working properly?
'Something'....is amiss....

It's human nature to 'externalize'.....and what ones' focus can zero in on tends to be that which one desires their intention of 'perfection'.

*s* Just musing 'different' here....;)

Old Skool and Proud...but just being the Devils' Advocate for the moment....*g*
Although, blind test can be helpful when evaluating equipment, it is not nearly enough to be the decisive method of determining which system sound is best. One have to live with the system for a long time in order to determine what’s best. In addition, coloration, measurements, frequency respond, debt perception, attack, pace of music, dynamics, quietness are all attractive contributes of a great sounding system. However, many times they are not tangible to each other. Let me explain. If you desire good dynamic system, you will introduce some coloration in the sound - which is typical with horn speakers. If you desire low noise floor and quite system you’ll loose dynamics and micro details, attack and quickness and the sound will become dead. The moral of the story is that, all comes to careful balance of your system attributes. 
@tannoy56....Agreed.  I've come to equate that balance to watching someone walking a slackline vs. a tightrope...

The latter allows for a relatively consistent 'base' on which to tread.

The former, which I consider the 'line' (which is more of a strap of some width) as an analog to the choice of format one plays and the quality of that recording....which all seem to agree is 'variable'...

'Staying on top' of either can absorb varying amounts of ones' time, cash, and perception.  Since none can really claim to be equal on any of those variables...

I've been lucky to have the company of identical twins within my life.
It takes time, but they aren't perfectly identical....but it does take time and perception to tease those differences out....

Mho of audio equipment....nobody has cloned the spaces that we put them in.... ;)  And that's just the start....