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

@mihorn - Oh, I definitely hear that !! EC absolutely sounds like he's singing right next to your ears.  

A bad recording to me is one with a lot of grainy static like sound. Or recorded with a very small soundstage that doesn’t go past the speakers. Or vocals too loud or quiet. Really amazing the wide range of quality. Good recordings are really a joy to listen to. 
 

I have Rockport Avior ii speakers driven by a Boulder 866 amp 

@erik_squires 

How can I possibly know whether their are "faults" in a recording unless I've been in the room witnessing the original performance?  I suppose, were I a trained recording engineer I might not be asking this question.

Typically, recordings that sound "bad" to me are tonally unbalanced (more often than not, overly emphasizing upper mids and highs). Then, there are those plagued by exaggerated vocal sibilance. The latter can be attributed to poor mic' ing technique. The latter, I'm not so sure. Can we assume all recording artists are after a natural sounding product?  I have no idea. 

 

@stuartk - I don't know what you can tell or not, but discussions here on A'gon often mention speakers that can be too revealing of a recording's faults... so I'm asking, what recordings have faults? 

The Eric Clapton example is a good one.