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On 2/25/2016 8:53 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 2/25/16 8:08 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/25/2016 6:58 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/25/16 6:32 PM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 25 Feb 2016 17:59:15 -0500, Justan Olphart wrote: He must've been getting warm. The name-calling has crescendoed. It's that damn fake set of Klipschorns that's got him ****ed. Damn, if the label isn't even spelled correctly, you'd think they'd be able to recognize some not-so-genuine Klipschorns. -- This from a moron who believe expensive little speakers deliver more lifelike sound than expensive big speakers. Are there no limits to your ignorance, JohnnyTrash? It really depends on what kind of music you typically listen to. For example, the speakers you like and listen to have an "airy" sound to them that are ideal for classical music and for lifelike reproduction of acoustic instruments (guitar, etc.) along with vocals. However, they are not that great for the lifelike reproduction of hard rock with loud electric guitars running through distortion pedals and piercing vocals. For that, any cheap system works just fine. Trash in = Trash out, faithfully reproduced, of course. Back in the late 50's and early 60's as "hi-fi" became a big deal, speakers became generally categorized as being a "West Coast Sound" or a "East Coast Sound". West coast speakers were brighter sounding, some using horns instead of a paper mid-range driver whereas East coast speakers were softer sounding in the mids, producing a more "lush" sound. I suppose the reason was the growing popularity of rock and roll and "surf" music that originated on the west coast. In those days JBL was probably the leader in the "west coast" speaker sound. East coast speakers included Jensen, Electro-voice, Advent and eventually Bose in 1968. Never been a fan of most of what is called "hard rock" music. Plus, I don't listen to the music I like at really loud levels. Hmmm. You might be wasting your time and space in your living room with those big maggies then. They have to be driven fairly hard to accurately produce a "lifelike" sound. Maybe you'd be better off with a good set of bookshelf speakers. Bowers & Wilkins 600 series come immediately to mind. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On Fri, 26 Feb 2016 02:41:25 -0500, "Mr. Luddite" wrote:
On 2/25/2016 8:53 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/25/16 8:08 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote: On 2/25/2016 6:58 PM, Keyser Söze wrote: On 2/25/16 6:32 PM, John H. wrote: On Thu, 25 Feb 2016 17:59:15 -0500, Justan Olphart wrote: He must've been getting warm. The name-calling has crescendoed. It's that damn fake set of Klipschorns that's got him ****ed. Damn, if the label isn't even spelled correctly, you'd think they'd be able to recognize some not-so-genuine Klipschorns. -- This from a moron who believe expensive little speakers deliver more lifelike sound than expensive big speakers. Are there no limits to your ignorance, JohnnyTrash? It really depends on what kind of music you typically listen to. For example, the speakers you like and listen to have an "airy" sound to them that are ideal for classical music and for lifelike reproduction of acoustic instruments (guitar, etc.) along with vocals. However, they are not that great for the lifelike reproduction of hard rock with loud electric guitars running through distortion pedals and piercing vocals. For that, any cheap system works just fine. Trash in = Trash out, faithfully reproduced, of course. Back in the late 50's and early 60's as "hi-fi" became a big deal, speakers became generally categorized as being a "West Coast Sound" or a "East Coast Sound". West coast speakers were brighter sounding, some using horns instead of a paper mid-range driver whereas East coast speakers were softer sounding in the mids, producing a more "lush" sound. I suppose the reason was the growing popularity of rock and roll and "surf" music that originated on the west coast. In those days JBL was probably the leader in the "west coast" speaker sound. East coast speakers included Jensen, Electro-voice, Advent and eventually Bose in 1968. Never been a fan of most of what is called "hard rock" music. Plus, I don't listen to the music I like at really loud levels. Hmmm. You might be wasting your time and space in your living room with those big maggies then. They have to be driven fairly hard to accurately produce a "lifelike" sound. Maybe you'd be better off with a good set of bookshelf speakers. Bowers & Wilkins 600 series come immediately to mind. When Harry goes to live performances he asks them to keep the volume down. That way he can say his 'big maggies' (if he actually has any, which I doubt) match the sound of the orchestra. -- Ban liars, tax cheats, idiots, audiophools, and narcissists...not guns! |
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