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I stumbled upon this rather interesting method for testing/listening to system components etc... in a music system. The article comes from Swedish brand, Lejonklou.
Here's a quick excerpt:
" It is also strongly recommended to stay away from audiophile recordings and records that are supposed to sound sweet and nice. Music that is noisy and/or has been recorded with low quality can often be much easier to compare with. This is because your focus then shifts from the nice sound to what the musicians are trying to communicate."
Full guide: https://www.lejonklou.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Tune-Method.pdf
I'm going to try out the process laid out in the guide to see if there's anything interesting I haven't noticed before when performing the usual A/B audiophile recording listening exercises.
What are all your thoughts on the Tune-Method?
Here's a quick excerpt:
" It is also strongly recommended to stay away from audiophile recordings and records that are supposed to sound sweet and nice. Music that is noisy and/or has been recorded with low quality can often be much easier to compare with. This is because your focus then shifts from the nice sound to what the musicians are trying to communicate."
Full guide: https://www.lejonklou.com/wp-content/uploads/2014/10/Tune-Method.pdf
I'm going to try out the process laid out in the guide to see if there's anything interesting I haven't noticed before when performing the usual A/B audiophile recording listening exercises.
What are all your thoughts on the Tune-Method?