@earthbound Good question! Let me push back on "live music" as the singular standard here on two counts. First, live venues are often acoustically compromised — reverberant halls, poor PA mixing, variable sightlines — and frequently sound worse than a well-assembled stereo. Anyone who has sat under a balcony at a large concert hall or suffered a muddy festival PA knows that "live" is not automatically a sonic benchmark.
Second, and more fundamentally, a large proportion of the music most of us actually love — studio recordings, electronic music, much jazz and pop — was never a live acoustic event in the first place. It was created *in* the recording medium. Setting live unamplified music as the reference standard for evaluating reproduced sound is a much narrower criterion than it first appears.
The 800s don’t just measure “low distortion.” They measure low across frequency, level, and load. That means tiny dynamic shifts — breath, string texture, vocal inflection — aren’t masked. You’re hearing the signal emerge from blackness, not etched detail....When timing is right, music feels alive — when it’s off, even slightly, things feel dry. This is true across all Linn products including their speakers.
Linn’s Dynamik supply and rail switching keep voltage incredibly stable. So when music demands current (bass transients, orchestral swings), the amp doesn’t flatten or harden. It stays relaxed and controlled. That composure reads as musical flow, not sterility. This is what a truly extraordinary switching PSU delivers.
This is a very clear statement as to why it’s not "measures well VERSUS adding harmonics for musicality." There are multiple paths toward "musical." They all involve listening and measuring and, of course, if a company only seeks measurements, they are unlikely to get to "musical."
Frankly, I’m tired of this non-issue.

