I answered your question in post 320 of yours. You said prove my statement in post 277. I said I can not, just as no one can prove a high efficiency speaker yields more enjoyment per the title of this thread.So much hearsay. Maybe this maybe that. Are you just spouting off?
Tell you what Kingrex, why don't you make a positive case for what your goals are?
I am conjoining Emotion and Enjoyment by incidentally using either word. Hyper focusing on a singe word is deflection from the overall topic. The topic being, does a high sensitive speaker bring higher emotional engagement or enjoyment during listening.I don’t think this thread asks about enjoyment. It asks about conveying the emotion of music. What do we mean by the emotion of music? Is it the emotion of the listener resulting from hearing the music? Or is it the emotion embedded in the music by the composer and then interpreted by the performer? Is it the intent of those who bring you the music?
If it is the latter, I would argue a system that presents the most information as uncorrupted as possible, is the one that is more successful at conveying the emotion of the music. And if this is the case, we must ask ourselves what types of systems are able to present the most amount of uncorrupted information captured by the recording.
I answered your question in post 320 of yours. You said prove my statement in post 277. ...
Tell you what Kingrex, why don't you make a positive case for what your goals are?
That makes sense, but all too often, with classical music, the sound in the hall is not all that good — and worse. Sometimes a good recording is a better experience and connection to the music in my experience.
…And if this is the case, we must ask ourselves types of systems are able to present the most amount of uncorrupted information captured by the recording.
How do you plan on answering that question?
The only way, by listening. I answered that question for myself when I directly compared a suite of Lamm electronics to Pass electronics. One clearly presented more information from the same recordings with less corruption. The Lamm conveyed more emotion of the music.
This was not my emotion, but the emotion of the performers. There was more insight to the performance because it presented more information in terms of nuance and dynamics and this was increased further when I replaced the Magico speakers with the corner horns.
And its all started by anonymous Ceasar who might have no system at all lol.
And its all started by anonymous Ceasar who might have no system at all lol.
I think sonic attributes (glossary style) and emotional engagement are two separate things, but they are related in the following way.
Emotional engagement is not, properly understood, a direct objective; it is a result or an effect.
The direct objective is whatever sonic cues idiosyncratically remind each of us of the sound of live music.* If each of us follows our preferred sonic cues like a roadmap to natural sound or to suspension of disbelief -- however you wish to think of it -- then the successful implementation in a stereo system of those preferred sonic cues will result in emotional engagement from reproduced music.
The sonic cues are the ingredients to a culinary recipe. The stereo system does the cooking. Emotional engagement is the resulting dish.
*For example, dynamics is a sonic cue which an audiophile may choose to maximize with very sensitive horn loudspeakers.

I don’t think this thread asks about enjoyment. It asks about conveying the emotion of music. What do we mean by the emotion of music? Is it the emotion of the listener resulting from hearing the music? Or is it the emotion embedded in the music by the composer and then interpreted by the performer? Is it the intent of those who bring you the music?
If it is the latter, I would argue a system that presents the most information as uncorrupted as possible, is the one that is more successful at conveying the emotion of the music.
And if this is the case, we must ask ourselves what types of systems are able to present the most amount of uncorrupted information captured by the recording.
Enjoyment is the general term used to refer to the objective of sound reproduction. But surely people listen differently - e.g. emotionally or intellectually - is a common subject of music magazines.
Audio debates have used both terms (emotion and enjoyment) indifferently, but surely high-end marketing prefers "emotion" - it sells better, although most people simply look for enjoyment.
Are you suggesting that high efficiency speakers are better emotion carriers and less enjoyable?
Sorry, stereo needs corruption to be enjoyable. But I surely agree on "the most amount of information"![]()
You and others keep assuming what Caesar means by the emotion of music. He did not write the emotion of listener. I am going by the very title of this thread. To me, it is an open question and the uncertainty is creating arguments between the posters. I do think emotion of music is very different from enjoyment. He did not write enjoyment. Surely words have meanings.
My music mentor in Vienna told me a great story about what various conductors have told him over the years. He told me that the genius of the music is in the composer’s mind and is corrupted the moment he puts his thoughts down on paper. Those thoughts are further corrupted by the conductor who interprets the markings on the paper. The original thoughts are further corrupted when the musicians interpret the movements of the conductor and they perform accordingly. The passage of time and interpretation corrupt the original work.
To me, the emotion of the music is what is created by the composer, the conductor, the musician. The emotion of the listener is the result of what he hears from the performance and whatever else his mind brings to it.
It would be nice for Caesar to clarify this point, which I think is critical to furthering the discussion of a very interesting topic. I’m not aware of books where this is discussed.
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