What is a bad recording?


In the ongoing battle of having a system that is too laid back versus one that is too revealing of recording faults, I want to ask you all, what are examples of good music that in your system plays badly?  

Please mention your speakers too  if possible. 

erik_squires

If it plays "badly" on my system, how would I know if it is a "good" recording?

For example, I was listening to Journey and it seems that a lot of their music has a lot of "glare," at least on my system.  Is it in the recording, or does my system just bring it out?

I think much of the "glare" that we hear in lots of recordings is actually in the "fuzz tone" for the guitar that just doesn’t take well to digital transformation. 

Hey @toddalin  - What I meant was, that the music is good, but doesn't necessarily sound good on your system.  I meant to separate out the lyrical and musical notes from the choices and limitations in the recording.

For instance, there may be a classical tenor who was gifted and recorded with an excellent orchestra but which your system does not like. 

A recent lousy example... mastering technician on crack literally had monitors out of phase, wondered where the bass went and eq'd it to high hell (ya can't make up this crackhead stuff). Fortunately, it was a digital master. You have to do forensics on it to salvage certain recordings.

On a related note,  i have a ns5000 based setup with a certain  turntable primarily dedicated to fix crap and archive albums from obscure long gone artists (only a very crappy old pressing exists, etc)...Endured some wallet abuse, but, it was probably worth it to get the best possible salvage solution for some artist voices that would otherwise be lost forever.

What is a bad recording?