- Thread Author
- #1
...He spends far too much of the article on tangents to make a point that could have been made much more efficiently...
Randy - I think his points are very valid and become quite choppy waters if not navigated properly.
Audiophiles can't agree on what day it is, much less what's "best".point of reference with regards to the best the industry can offer
Audiophiles can't agree on what day it is, much less what's "best".
cheers,
AJ
If the answer is yes then perhaps one take away for audio reviewers is to resist the urge of comparing with the “ultra” or the so called "best" which is always debatable and focus instead on comparing with a line-up of similarly priced products.
For me all those reviews are the same, everything sounds warm, gentle, subtile, detailed, analogue etcetera
Take some scissors, cut 20 hifi pictures (speakers, amps, dacs, cables,powersupplies, may be mixed), and seperate from the conclusion about sound quality. I bet not many are able to replace the right conclusion to the right item.
...
I’d never heard of Jeff Fritz, the author of the subject of this thread. I read his Sonus Faber Amati Futura review and I think he did a fine job of describing how they sound and what to expect.
Reviewers are only valuable if they have a very long tenure in the business and have experienced a lot of product.
He would appear to fit your criteria. He's been reviewing for a while, and for a pretty wide variety of components in the $10k - $100k MSRP range
I like the article, and agree with many of the points. I disagree with the author's title for the article though... "The biggest problem..."
Mike already identified "the biggest problem with reviewers" in a previous thread, one in which a fellow member and contributor to Part Time Audiophile noted the trend to only publish positive reviews, and simply not publicize unfavorable ones. Mike pointed out that that would be anathema in any other industry (autos, for example).
I agree.
It’s fun to find reviews of equipment you already own to see if the reviewer’s perceptions match your experience with the product.
I’d never heard of Jeff Fritz, the author of the subject of this thread. I read his Sonus Faber Amati Futura review and I think he did a fine job of describing how they sound and what to expect.
Reviewers are only valuable if they have a very long tenure in the business and have experienced a lot of product. If you own or have owned or experienced gear they have reviewed, you can figure out if your tastes match those of the reviewer.