Listening and evaluating equipment and systems.


I have found that listening to music is far more complex than simply hearing sound. A quick audition can reveal whether a system is bright, dull, thin, congested, or initially impressive. It tells us much less about whether it allows us to live with music… to relax into a performance, follow its structure, and keep discovering something in familiar recordings.

Critical listening can be useful, but it can also mislead. When we focus the mind’s ear on one sound… a drum strike, cymbal, vocal phrase, or bass note… much of the rest of the music recedes from awareness. If that sound is intermittent, we are only sampling brief fragments while other instruments are entering, fading, sustaining, and interacting. A speaker is never reproducing one isolated sound. Everything happening at once affects the whole presentation.

Music is a gestalt… rhythm, tone, dynamics, timing, space, harmony, and emotional intent occurring together. A system may impress by spotlighting details, yet prove less convincing over hours or days of actual listening. Another may seem less spectacular at first, but preserve the natural flow and wholeness of a performance more successfully.

The better test is to stop moving attention from one audiophile cue to another. Play complete albums over days or weeks and let the music direct your attention. A few minutes of analysis may identify a trait. Extended, undirected listening will tell you whether the system is truly right.

ghdprentice

@ghdprentice  Well said!  For me, I need the structure to be in place first before settling into the music and its emotional impact on my body.  By that I mean L vs R symmetry needs to be very good for early reflections and frequency response so that imaging is dead center and doesn't drift.  Decay time shouldn't be too long or short of deviate by huge amounts between bass and mids/highs.  When the presentation of the sonic event is decent (usually requires room treatments, EQ etc.) then I can slip into a musical listening and not equipment/room listening mindset.

Good post and a good reminder of what matters. I am an inveterate tinkerer with all things, but the changes are getting smaller.

I often describe how I listen to music as being "intentional" and that it is never something I use as background noise. If I am cooking or doing some sort of project, I might put on a favorite playlist using my phone, but when I turn on my audio system, the intent is to listen to music and nothing else. 

Your suggestion about really exploring a recording resonated with me, especially since the other weekend, while my wife was out with friends, I decided to listen to the (ahem) 4 different recordings I own of Bill Evans' "Waltz for Debby." I have the two 45 versions (the Riverside and the UHQR) plus the recent Craft reissue and another earlier release. Each one has a different feel and empty. In the end, the UHQR was the one I found most satisfying, followed by the Craft version. 

Seriously geeky? Absolutely. But it was an interesting experiment and one I can imagine repeating with other albums where I have multiple versions. 

Well said.... and I totally agree.  I generally listen closely if I’ve made a change, but sometimes it just becomes too much of a habit for me. The best indicator is when I stop listening critically, and just get caught up in the music, which really should be the end goal. We all have a unique level of realism we require for that to happen, but it certainly can and does happen at some point.  

Well stated and I completely agree.  Listening for me is intentional and an experience, emotionally and physically transporting me out of time constraints.