How do you judge your system's neutrality?



Here’s an answer I’ve been kicking around: Your system is becoming more neutral whenever you change a system element (component, cable, room treatment, etc.) and you get the following results:

(1) Individual pieces of music sound more unique.
(2) Your music collection sounds more diverse.

This theory occurred to me one day when I changed amps and noticed that the timbres of instruments were suddenly more distinct from one another. With the old amp, all instruments seemed to have a common harmonic element (the signature of the amp?!). With the new amp, individual instrument timbres sounded more unique and the range of instrument timbres sounded more diverse. I went on to notice that whole songs (and even whole albums) sounded more unique, and that my music collection, taken as a whole, sounded more diverse.

That led me to the following idea: If, after changing a system element, (1) individual pieces of music sound more unique, and (2) your music collection sounds more diverse, then your system is contributing less of its own signature to the music. And less signature means more neutral.

Thoughts?

P.S. This is only a way of judging the relative neutrality of a system. Judging the absolute neutrality of a system is a philosophical question for another day.

P.P.S. I don’t believe a system’s signature can be reduced to zero. But it doesn’t follow from that that differences in neutrality do not exist.

P.P.P.S. I’m not suggesting that neutrality is the most important goal in building an audio system, but in my experience, the changes that have resulted in greater neutrality (using the standard above) have also been the changes that resulted in more musical enjoyment.
bryoncunningham
Even if your system is neutral, how do you know the recording is a faithful capture of a real event?
Other than live, recording has not been a faithful recapture of a "real event" since multitracking came along. Also, you may not find many artists who are satisfied with the sound that comes of the speakers (from the recording) as opposed to the sound they imagined in their head.
Tostadosunidos, even in a live listening, one doesn't hear what artists "imagined in their heads."

I find most systems are smeared because of not only slow drivers without much of a leading edge, but also because of slowness in cables with the dielectrics being chiefly responsible. I have speaker wires with nothing but air between the leads, not beads with air around them. They are very fast.
Fast cables? Signals travel at near the speed of light. I don't know how much faster cables can be.

Also dielectrics at low frequency is marketing mumbo jumbo from cable manufacturers. It can be measured in capacitance which is incredibly small on short runs and at low frequencies (audible frequencies).

In a typical PVC 1000ft wire the dielectric will slow a signal down 2 microseconds so in a 10 ft wire that would be 0.02 microseconds. That is a potential blurring of the frequency 0.00000002Hz. That calculation is at RF, not audible. It is even less at lower frequencies. If anyone can honestly say they hear that, please step forward because I suspect you will be able to make some serious cash being a scientific tool.

The above calculations come from:
http://www.nationalwire.com/support_basicintro.asp

National Wire is a company that quotes resources for their information on the bottom of their web page and probably has many more engineers working for it than any audio cable company.
Scvan, I am talking about what you hear. Some cables have a sharp leading edge and some smear the sound. I always suspect the dielectric materials. We are speaking here of ac signal not constant conduction. If you don't hear how smeared gold wires in speaker wires make the sound, we have little to discuss.