Horn Porn weekend

bonzo75

Member Sponsor
Feb 26, 2014
22,444
13,474
2,710
London
But why would you ?
Why not just have one well designed pair of loudspeakers and spend some time and effort optimising them in the room.
Keith.

For the same reason that I could not find a girl who looked a lady like Ingrid Bergman, had some Sharon Stone and Megan Fox in her, was as kind as Mother Theresa, and as rich as Bill Gates' daughter, and who would be 25 forever.
 

853guy

Active Member
Aug 14, 2013
1,161
10
38
I really do not understand this mindset, as has been mentioned countless times, a loudspeaker does not know what it is playing, a series of test tones or a symphony.
A well designed full range loudspeaker 20Hz up in a properly treated room will play everything , why would it not?
Keith.

Do you really want to know the answer, Keith?
 

bonzo75

Member Sponsor
Feb 26, 2014
22,444
13,474
2,710
London
For the same reason that I could not find a girl who looked a lady like Ingrid Bergman, had some Sharon Stone and Megan Fox in her, was as kind as Mother Theresa, and as rich as Bill Gates' daughter, and who would be 25 forever.

I did find a few that measured well, though. Not good enough on many other, er, fronts
 

853guy

Active Member
Aug 14, 2013
1,161
10
38

Ron Resnick

Site Co-Owner, Administrator
Jan 24, 2015
16,017
13,347
2,665
Beverly Hills, CA
I really do not understand this mindset, as has been mentioned countless times, a loudspeaker does not know what it is playing, a series of test tones or a symphony.
A well designed full range loudspeaker 20Hz up in a properly treated room will play everything , why would it not?
Keith.

I truly do not understand why bonzo's main point is conceptually puzzling. Aren't some automobiles better at certain tasks than other automobiles?

To my ears electrostatic speakers reproduce female vocals in a more realistic and convincing way than any other speakers I have heard. Conversely, to my ears, the four tower Genesis system and the two tower Rockport Arrakis system reproduce symphony orchestra music in a more realistic and convincing way than any electrostatic speakers I have heard.
 

bonzo75

Member Sponsor
Feb 26, 2014
22,444
13,474
2,710
London
I truly do not understand why bonzo's main point is conceptually puzzling. Aren't some automobiles better at certain tasks than other automobiles?

To my ears electrostatic speakers reproduce female vocals in a more realistic and convincing way than any other speakers I have heard. Conversely, to my ears, the four tower Genesis system and the two tower Rockport Arrakis system reproduce symphony orchestra music in a more realistic and convincing way than any electrostatic speakers I have heard.

Audiocrack, Detlof, and others also have similar multi systems or are going down that route. Some also do that with TTs - A direct drive, an idler, a belt. Multiple arms, Loetsu on one, Ortofon on another. Some systems have energy and drive, some laid back, etc etc
 

Purite Audio

banned
May 28, 2013
417
1
0
www.puriteaudio.co.uk
I am not fond of analogies , to be really realistic and convincing you would need to hear the mic feed of the singers voice , do you in fact mean that you prefer the way electrostatics portray female vocals?
I can perfectly well understand why you wouldn't choose electrostatics to replay a full symphony orchestra.
Keith.
 

bonzo75

Member Sponsor
Feb 26, 2014
22,444
13,474
2,710
London
I am not fond of analogies , to be really realistic and convincing you would need to hear the mic feed of the singers voice , do you in fact mean that you prefer the way electrostatics portray female vocals?
I can perfectly well understand why you wouldn't choose electrostatics to replay a full symphony orchestra.
Keith.

I know you are not fond of analog, though it's more realistic
 

853guy

Active Member
Aug 14, 2013
1,161
10
38
I really do not understand this mindset, as has been mentioned countless times, a loudspeaker does not know what it is playing, a series of test tones or a symphony. A well designed full range loudspeaker 20Hz up in a properly treated room will play everything , why would it not?
Keith.
853guy said:
Do you really want to know the answer, Keith?
Do tell.
853guy said:
Sound is not music. Music is not always sound. Does that answer it for you?

(Cue the sound of crickets...)

Hi Keith,

Unfortunately, I’m only going to repeat myself from previous threads and risk exceeding my experience-to-opinion ratio, but I agree with your statement above: “a loudspeaker does not know what it is playing…”. No, it does not, and it cannot. No component can. Sonata or sine wave, no component can or ever will possess the sentience to “know” the difference. Only we do.

Sound is simply the rapid compression and rarefaction in the average density or pressure of air molecules above and below the current atmospheric pressure. As such, it can be produced by any vibrating body, whether it be a set of vocal chords or a volcano. The ear mechanism (and the body as a whole) discern these vibrations in the air, which upon arrival at the eardrum and middle ear cause sympathetic vibrations. Of course, sound does not need us to hear it for it to exist - that is whether we hear it or not depends on its frequency, amplitude and our proximity to it. It can also be converted into an electrical signal (at which point it ceases to be sound), and that electrical signal then converted back into sound via a transducer. I’m sure you know all this already, right?

Music, however, is a perceptual phenomena that is culturally-socially prescribed. Music differs from sound in that in order to be “music” it must be intentional. A volcano may be an impressive sound, but it is not the result of a human being’s intentional gestures. Neither, for that matter, is a whale call, as “musical” as that sound may be (sorry whale music lovers, take the issue up with musicologists).

These intentional gestures express themselves as pitch and amplitude over time. However, sound need not be present in order for music to exist.

For instance, right now Deftones “Hexagram” is playing from their self-titled album. Exiting the first verse, mariachi horns begin playing the riff. As the chorus kicks in, Mavis Staples sings a harmony vocal alongside Chino Moreno’s guttural screams.

‘Weird’, you say. ‘I didn’t know that remix existed.’

It doesn’t. All that music has taken place inside my brain just now. If you wanted, we could perform an fMRI scan on my brain, and observe the neural-biological process taking place. No sound, but very definitely music.

To take it further, if you had learned to read music, we could go into space, put on space suits, and using only a pencil and paper (or a digital tablet - let’s be 21st Century about this), I could transcribe musical notation for a melody, hand it to you, and you would “hear” the exact melody I had written, in the vast gaseous partial vacuum that is outer space, without a single sound being made, even if the melody itself had never before been heard by a single human being.* If you were a conductor, I could have transcribed an entire symphony for orchestra, pipe organ, sitar, fog horn, mixed choir and eight soloists and you could have “heard” every note, change in tempo and dynamic shift.

That’s the power of perception, and why music exists as a socio-cultural phenomenon, because its existence is not necessarily reliant on the presence of sound. Music can and most often is represented by sound, as it is when ever someone sings, plays an instrument, or indeed, plays a musical storage medium via the reproduction mechanism, but it’s always a phenomenon taking place within one's perception.

Back to your point above. No component knows what’s music and what’s not. But we do. We have a portion of the brain containing neural populations specifically dedicated to the processing of music, wholly distinct from other intentional meaningful sounds including speech (Norman-Haignere, McDermott, Kanwisher (2015).

Not only that, we bring to each musical event (whether live or pre-recorded) a unique set of experiences in which the listener’s perception, ability to discern changes in pitch, amplitude and time** and general mood influence the perception of music that have only begun to be explored in the last twenty years. This research is still in a nascent state of development, and is mining data apropos the human hearing mechanism and its neuro-biological processes that testing components on benches with steady-state signals will never do.

“A well designed full range loudspeaker 20Hz up in a properly treated room will play everything” is true in as much as “everything” will be an electrical signal converted to sound within the context of the transducer’s inherent sensitivity, efficiency, phase-coherency and frequency response deviations and the amplifier's electrically co-dependent ability to drive it (room-related time, phase, amplitude and frequency anomalies notwithstanding - there is no universally agreed upon standard for "properly treated"). Whether that component’s resultant sound is music, and matches the listener’s expectations and experience of what is music and what is not has nothing to do with its independent objectively-measured electrical parameters, no matter how precisely those measurements may be performed.

As always, I reserve the right to be completely and utterly wrong in regards to my current understanding of the available research, and of my limitless capacity for delusion and deception. This is, after all, a rock drummer typing.

Love, hugs, etc,

853guy

*Obviously, at some point, one needs to have perceived the tones in order for them to be consciously attached to the notation and be understood as music. If one were born profoundly deaf, this would not be possible (at least, I’m not aware of any research that suggests otherwise).

**It should be noted pitch and rhythm have been found to be neurally separable; see Levitin, Tirovolas (2009), and that musicians tend to be more sensitive than non-musicians to co-varied timing and amplitude variations; see Hatara, Tirovolas, Duan, Levy, Levitin (2011).
 
Last edited:

dan31

Well-Known Member
Jul 22, 2010
1,016
365
1,153
SF Bay
One of the characteristics that usually provides us with a preference is the "Q" of a driver design. A high Q design will tend to dampen slowly and a low Q design will dampen quickly. Each driver design has pluses and minuses as well as differing interaction with the amplifier driving the driver.

This is the easiest way for me to understand the different "character" we assign to horns, electrostatic or cone based speaker technologies. Bonzo's preferances are easier for me to understand.
 

Pepe57

Well-Known Member
Jan 25, 2014
90
20
115
Milano Italy
Of course everyone makes his own experiences and consequently choiches.
So it will be a long way and i think everyone will be in a certain point of this way while time is passing.
In that sense i feel there is not a right or a wrong way. Just differents moments and stages we will meet on the street.
In my personal walking i got some beliefs that i can resume in: first become very aware of my goal by listening very ofetn to live acoustic music, keep my mind open on different solutions and way to reach the goal.
So my personal idea, after so many years, is that for differents kids of music, i prefer to use differents systems. For me there is no one system that can be the best for all kinds of music (it is difficult to reach one system that, for me, is the best just for one kind of music...). Every system is, in my mind a compromise in Italy we say that the blanket is always short somewhere, i don't know if this is said also in the USA). So i think that differents blankets can be better adapted to cover one or another side depending on what i wish to cover in that moment.
And if a person make a choice different from mine i don't think he is (or i am) wrong. Simply he is more interested in that moment, to cover a side different from mine...
For example i had at the same time the Goldmund Reference, the Versa, the Thorens Reference and others turntables. The first i left was the Thorens and then the Goldmund. But i still think they had a reason to stay in my systems at that moment (the Goldmund was also very well made and nice looking) but not today. The same for differents cartridges and other components.
Because i have chnaged a little my tastes and goals (perhaps in worse i don know, but this is a fact).
:)
 

bonzo75

Member Sponsor
Feb 26, 2014
22,444
13,474
2,710
London

About us

  • What’s Best Forum is THE forum for high end audio, product reviews, advice and sharing experiences on the best of everything else. This is THE place where audiophiles and audio companies discuss vintage, contemporary and new audio products, music servers, music streamers, computer audio, digital-to-analog converters, turntables, phono stages, cartridges, reel-to-reel tape machines, speakers, headphones and tube and solid-state amplification. Founded in 2010 What’s Best Forum invites intelligent and courteous people of all interests and backgrounds to describe and discuss the best of everything. From beginners to life-long hobbyists to industry professionals, we enjoy learning about new things and meeting new people, and participating in spirited debates.

Quick Navigation

User Menu

Steve Williams
Site Founder | Site Owner | Administrator
Ron Resnick
Site Co-Owner | Administrator
Julian (The Fixer)
Website Build | Marketing Managersing