audio.bill
Active member
Rough and grainy.Lots of definitions of liquid and organic, both words to me are positive traits in describing the music that plays on a system...so what does everyone describe as the opposite?
Rough and grainy.Lots of definitions of liquid and organic, both words to me are positive traits in describing the music that plays on a system...so what does everyone describe as the opposite?
To me liquid means grain free with a smooth and natural sound.
Except that unamplified live music often sounds anything but smooth. Liquid is meaningless to me as audio vocabulary, and even conjures negative associations.
Too many systems sound overly polished, polite and inoffensive -- 'liquid' perhaps?
That sound is offensive to me, it has little resemblance to the real thing.
Do the words really matter. I feel as I play more in this hobby, read more, listen more, i feel descriptions by authors mean less and less.
What I really mean is I have no idea what something in general sounds like till I hear it. And I have no idea more specifically until I have it in my system where I know the rest of the playback and have a way to evaluate what I am hearing and what it means to me. Especially when it comes to front end gear.
I have this old link showing Gorden Holts audio meanings and he noted Liquid
liquid Textureless sound.
texture, texturing A perceptible pattern or structure in reproduced sound, even if random in nature. Texturing gives the impression that the energy continuum of the sound is composed of discrete particles, like the grain of a photograph.
And you mentioned glare ; glare An unpleasant quality of hardness or brightness, due to excessive low- or mid-treble energy.
grainy A moderate texturing of reproduced sound. The sonic equivalent of grain in a photograph. Coarser than dry but finer than gritty.
gritty A harsh, coarse-grained texturing of reproduced sound. The continuum of energy seems to be composed of discrete, sharp-edged particles.
I say it all depends on a personal definition.
http://www.integracoustics.com/MUG/MUG/bbs/stereophile_audio-glossary.html
https://www.head-fi.org/articles/describing-sound-a-glossary.12328/
After numerous recent online threads about the meaning of words used in the audiophile vocabulary, I have come to the conclusion that audiophiles basically don't agree on the meaning of words that we use to describe what we hear. Everybody has their own definitions for the words they use. This shouldn't be a surprise because audiophiles seldom agree on anything related to audio.
I recommend those of you struggling and often misusing the "audiophile verbiage" to refer to Holt's and Pearson's original meaning of all these terms. I believe Stereophile recently posted something in this regard to clarify all the terminology used in our crazy hobby.
I fully agree some broad defining words are useful such as warm, lean, bright. My point about vernacular is no matter how many pages you fill, I have no idea what an MSB Select, Reference or my Mojo DAC actually sound like compared to one another. Not unless it's in my system and I really hear it. I especially dont know if the delta in price/performance is worth it.
Has anyone noticed review seem to be about 60% to 70% tech details and not about sound. Is this new?