Hot Stamper Pressings that Sound Their Best on Big Speakers at Loud Levels
This post was written circa 2005.
This commentary is about two things — knowing the kind of music you like, and getting the kind of sound you want.
If you believe what you read on the various sites where audiophiles freely dispense advice about everything under the sun regarding music, recordings and equipment, you are asking for trouble and you are surely going to get it.
You will encounter an endless supply of half-truths, untruths and just plain nonsense, more often than not defended tooth and nail by those with impressive typing skills but not much enthusiasm for the tedium of tweaking and critical listening.
What kind of equipment are these people using?
How deep is their experience in audio?
Truth be told, I was pretty misguided myself during the first ten (or twenty, gulp) years I spent in audio, reading the magazines, (I still have my Stereophiles and Absolute Sounds from the 70s in boxes in the garage), traipsing from stereo store to stereo store, trying to figure out what constituted Good Sound so that I could manage to get my own equipment to produce something closer to the best of what I was hearing.
Questions
I sympathize with those who have trouble making sense of this hobby. It can be very confusing, especially to the neophyte. It takes a long time (with plenty of effort and money expended along the way) to be able to answer some of the most fundamental (and most often overlooked) questions in audio:
1.) What kind of music do you like?
2.) What aspects of sound quality are the most important to you?
Armed with answers to the above two, the next question to be asked is:
3.) What equipment will best be able to give you the sound you want on the music you like, within the limits of your budget, room, WFA (Wife Acceptance Factor), etc.
If you haven’t been doing this audio stuff for at least ten years, you probably don’t know the answers to those last two questions. In other words, you still have a lot to learn.
I may not have all the answers, but after being in audio for more than thirty years [now close to 50], about half of that full-time (full-time being sixty to seventy-plus hours a week), I can say without embarrassment that I have some of them.
And for the most part I got them the old-fashioned way: I earned them.
Do You Like Rock Music?
Then make sure you buy speakers that can play rock music.
Don’t buy screens, panels or little boxes. With subs or without, don’t buy them.