Head-Fi Is Sponsored By:
Register FAQ Blogs Members List Calendar Mark Forums Read Today's Posts Search
 

2008 International
Head-Fi Meet
(Can Jam '08)
Impressions,
Reviews, Photos


Can Jam '08 graphic
courtesy of Edwood

Click on the links below
for Can Jam '08 photos,
impressions and reviews:


NightWoundsTime
lan
agile_one
wavoman
crappyjones123
Luke G
bperboy
jimaxp

 


Can Jam '08 Logo
T-Shirts For Sale


Featured

Head-Fi's Sponsors
(Premier Sponsors bolded)

Head-Fi Blogs
and Facebook

Check out Head-Fi's new
Blogs section.

Featured Head-Fi Blogs:

Jude's "Take My Word"

 From Japan - by Sasaki

 LFF's Blog

(
Start your own Blog!)

Attention
Facebook Users



Join the official
Head-Fi.org
Facebook Group


Head-Fi's Sponsors
(Premier Sponsors bolded)

Featured


Go Back   Head-Fi: Covering Headphones, Earphones and Portable Audio > Equipment Forums > Headphones (full-size)

Headphones (full-size) Discussion of full-size headphones.
Full-Size Headphone Directory (coming soon)

Meier Audio CORDA HEADSIX & The Ten Most Recent Sponsored Threads

Celebrating 6 years of Head-Fi, Meier Audio introduces the Limited Edition HEADSIX (portable headphone amp) Head-Fi Support Sales Action





Can Jam '08 graphic courtesy of gz76
Reply
 
LinkBack Thread Tools Display Modes
Old 02-04-2007, 01:02 AM   #1 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
fordgtlover's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 1,852
Default Describing Sound - A Glossary

The following list is a compilation of terms commonly used by Audio buffs to decribe sound and sound equipment. While I have created this original list, the terms & descriptions have been published elsewhere. Mostly, they are not my original works.

These are not my terms or definitions. I am simply republishing information that is already available in the public domain. As such, I will not defend the virtue or accuracy of any of this information. It serves to help and inform. I'm sure that this list is not exhaustive, but it is a pretty good starting point.

Glossary of Terms to describe sound.

Aggressive - Forward and bright sonic character.

Airy - Spacious. Open. Instruments sound like they are surrounded by a large reflective space full of air. Good reproduction of high frequency reflections. High frequency response extends to 15 or 20 kHz.

Ambience - Impression of an acoustic space, such as the performing hall in which a recording was made.

Analytical - Highly detailed.

Articulate - Intelligibility of voice(s) and instruments and the interactions between them.

Attack - The leading edge of a note and the ability of a system to reproduce the attack transients in music.

Balance - essentially tonal balance, the degree to which one aspect of the sonic spectrum is emphasized above the rest. Also channel balance, the relative level of the left and right stereo channels.

Bass - The audio frequencies between about 60Hz and 250Hz.

Bassy - Emphasized Bass.

Blanketed - Weak highs, as if a blanket were put over the speakers.

Bloated - Excessive mid bass around 250 Hz. Poorly damped low frequencies, low frequency resonances. See tubby.

Blurred - Poor transient response. Vague stereo imaging not focused.

Body - Fullness of sound, with particular emphasis on upper bass. Opposite of thin.

Boomy - Excessive bass around 125 Hz. Poorly damped low frequencies or low frequency resonances.

Boxy - Having resonances as if the music were enclosed in a box. Sometimes an emphasis around 250 to 500 Hz.

Breathy - Audible breath sounds in woodwinds and reeds such as flute or sax. Good response in the upper mids or highs.

Bright - A sound that emphasizes the upper midrange/lower treble. Harmonics are strong relative to fundamentals.

Brilliance - The 6kHz to 16kHz range controls the brilliance and clarity of sounds. Too much emphasis in this range can produce sibilance on the vocals.

Chesty - The vocalist sounds like their chest is too big. A bump in the low frequency response around 125 to 250 Hz.

Clear - See Transparent.

Closed - A closed-in sound lacking in openness, delicacy, air, and fine detail usually caused by Roll-off above 10kHz; in contrast to Open.

Congested- Smeared, confused, muddy, and flat; lacking transparency.

Coloured - Having timbres that are not true to life. Non flat response; peaks or dips.

Cool- Moderately deficient in body and warmth, due to progressive attenuation of frequencies below about 150Hz.

Crisp - Extended high frequency response, especially with cymbals.

Dark - A tonal balance that tilts downwards with increasing frequency. Opposite of bright. Weak high frequencies.

Decay - The fadeout of a note, it follows the attack.

Definition (or resolution) - The ability of a component to reveal the subtle information that is fundamental to high fidelity sound.

Delicate - High frequencies extending to 15 or 20 kHz without peaks.

Depth - A sense of distance (near to far) of different instruments.

Detail - The most delicate elements of the original sound and those which are the first to disappear with lesser equipment.

Detailed - Easy to hear tiny details in the music; articulate. Adequate high frequency response, sharp transient response.

Dry - A sound that is devoid of "juice", which usually comes across as fine grained and lean. Also a loss of reverberation as produced by a damped environment.

Dull - See dark.

Dynamic - The suggestion of energy and wide dynamic. Related to perceived speed as well as contrasts in volume both large and small.

Edgy - Too much high frequency response. Trebly. Harmonics are too strong relative to the fundamentals. Distorted, having unwanted harmonics that add an edge or raspiness.

Euphonic - An appealing form of distortion that generally enhances perceived fidelity, often ascribed to the harmonic elaborations of some valve amps.

Fast - Good reproduction of rapid transients which increase the sense of realism and "snap".

Fat - See Full and Warm. Or, spatially diffuse; a sound is panned to one channel, delayed, and then the delayed sound is panned to the other channel. Or, slightly distorted with analogue tape distortion or tube distortion.

Focus - A strong, precise sense of image projection.

Forward(ness) - Similar to an aggressive sound, a sense of image being projected in front of the speakers and of music being forced upon the listener. Compare "Laid-back".

Full - Strong fundamentals relative to harmonics. Good low frequency response, not necessarily extended, but with adequate level around 100 to 300 Hz. Male voices are full around 125 Hz; female voices and violins are full around 250 Hz; sax is full around 250 to 400 Hz. Opposite of thin.

Gentle - Opposite of edgy. The harmonics (of the highs and upper mids) are not exaggerated, or may even be weak.

Grainy - A slightly raw, exposed sound which lacks finesse. Not liquid or fluid.

Grip - A sense of control and sturdiness in the bass.

Grungy - Lots of harmonic or I.M. (Intermodulation) distortion.

Hard - Too much upper midrange, usually around 3 kHz. Or, good transient response, as if the sound is hitting you hard. Uncomfortable, forward, aggressive sound with a metallic tinge.

Harsh - Grating, abrasive. Too much upper midrange. Peaks in the frequency response between 2 and 6 kHz. Or, excessive phase shift in a digital recorder's low pass filter.

Headstage - The perception of the Soundstage while listening to headphones.

Highs - The audio frequencies above about 6000 Hz.

High Midrange (High Mids, Upper Mids) - The audio frequencies between about 2kHz and 6kHz.

Honky - Like cupping your hands around your mouth. A bump in the response around 500 to 700 Hz.

Imaging - The sense that a voice or instrument is in a particular place in the room.

Juicy - Sound that has joie de vivre, energy and life.

Laid-back - Recessed, distant-sounding, having exaggerated depth, usually because of a dished midrange. Compare "Forward".

Low Level Detail - The quietest sounds in a recording.

Low Midrange (Low Mids) - The audio frequencies between about 250Hz and 2000Hz.

Mellow - Reduced high frequencies, not edgy.

Midrange (Mids) - The audio frequencies between about 250 Hz and 6000 Hz.

Muddy - Not clear. Weak harmonics, smeared time response, I.M. distortion.

Muffled - Sounds like it is covered with a blanket. Weak highs or weak upper mids.

Musical (or musicality) - A sense of cohesion and subjective "rightness" in the sound.

Nasal - Honky, a bump in the response around 600 Hz.

Naturalness - Realism.

Opaque - Unclear, lacking transparency.

Open - Sound which has height and "air", relates to clean upper midrange and treble.

Pace - Often assoc. with rhythm, a strong sense of timing and beat.

Piercing - Strident, hard on the ears, screechy. Having sharp, narrow peaks in the response around 3 to 10 kHz.

PRaT - Pace, Rhythm and Timing

Presence Range - The presence range between 4kHz and 6kHz is responsible for the clarity and definition of voices and instruments. Increasing this range can make the music seem closer to the listener. Reducing the 5kHz content makes the sound more distant and transparent.

Presence - A sense that the instrument in present in the listening room. Synonyms are edge, punch, detail, closeness and clarity. Adequate or emphasized response around 5 kHz for most instruments, or around 2 to 5 kHz for kick drum and bass.

Puffy - A bump in the response around 500 Hz.

Punchy - Good reproduction of dynamics. Good transient response, with strong impact. Sometimes a bump around 5 kHz or 200 Hz.

Range - The distance between the lowest and highest tones.

Resolution (Resolving)- See Definition

Rich - See Full. Also, having euphonic distortion made of even order harmonics.

Roll-off (Rolloff) - The gradual attenuation that occurs at the lower or upper frequency range of a driver, network, or system. The roll-off frequency is usually defined as the frequency where response is reduced by 3 dB.

Round - High frequency rolloff or dip. Not edgy.

Rhythm - The controlled movement of sounds in time.

Seismic - Very low bass that you feel rather than hear.

Shrill - Strident, steely.

Sibilant - "Essy" Exaggerated "s" and "sh" sounds in singing, caused by a rise in the response around 6 to 10 kHz. Often heard on radio.

Sizzly - See Sibilant. Also, too much highs on cymbals.

Smeared - Lacking detail. Poor transient response, too much leakage between microphones. Poorly focused images.

Smooth - Easy on the ears, not harsh. Flat frequency response, especially in the midrange. Lack of peaks and dips in the response.

Snap - A system with good speed and transient response can deliver the immediacy or "snap" of live instruments.

Soundstage - The area between two speakers that appears to the listener to be occupied by sonic images. Like a real stage, a soundstage should have width, depth, and height.

Spacious - Conveying a sense of space, ambiance, or room around the instruments. Stereo reverb. Early reflections.

Speed - A fast system with good pace gives the impression of being right on the money in its timing.

Steely - Emphasized upper mids around 3 to 6 kHz. Peaky, non flat high frequency response. See Harsh, Edgy.

Strident - See Harsh, Edgy.

Sturdy - Solid, powerful, robust sound.

Sub-Bass - The audio frequencies between about 20Hz and 80Hz.

Sweet - Not strident or piercing. Delicate. Flat high frequency response, low distortion. Lack of peaks in the response. Highs are extended to 15 or 20 kHz, but they are not bumped up. Often used when referring to cymbals, percussion, strings, and sibilant sounds.

Telephone Like- See Tinny.

Thick - A lack of articulation and clarity in the bass.

Thin - Fundamentals are weak relative to harmonics. Bass light.

Tight - Good low frequency transient response and detail.

Timbre - The tonal character of an instrument

Timing - A sense of precision in tempo.

Tinny - Narrowband, weak lows, peaky mids. The music sounds like it is coming through a telephone or tin can.

Tone - The sound of definite pitch.

Transient - The leading edge of a percussive sound. Good transient response makes the sound as a whole more live and realistic.

Transparent - Easy to hear into the music, detailed, clear, not muddy. Wide flat frequency response, sharp time response, very low distortion and noise. A hear through quality that is akin to clarity and reveals all aspects of detail.

Tubby - Having low frequency resonances as if you're singing in a bathtub. See bloated.

Upper Midrange (Upper Mids, High Mids) - The audio frequencies between 2 kHz and 6 kHz.

Veiled - Like a silk veil is over the speakers. Slight noise or distortion or slightly weak high frequencies. Loss of detail due to limited transparency.

Warm - Good bass, adequate low frequencies, adequate fundamentals relative to harmonics. Not thin. Also excessive bass or mid bass. Also, pleasantly spacious, with adequate reverberation at low frequencies. Also see Rich, Round. Warm highs means sweet highs.

Weighty - Good low frequency response below about 50 Hz. A sense of substance and underpinning produced by deep, controlled bass. Suggesting an object of great weight or power, like a diesel locomotive.

Woolly - Loose, ill-defined bass.


Source:
FAQ: rec.audio.* Systems 2/99 (part 2 of 13)
Description of Sound - The Audiophile Way - SGHeadphones
Home Theater: Glossary
Stereophile: Sounds Like? An Audio Glossary
Stereophile: Sounds Like? An Audio Glossary
Magic Frequencies
Essentials of Music - Glossary
Recording Institute Of Detroit Audio RecordingTerms Glossary

Last edited by fordgtlover : 03-23-2008 at 11:58 PM.
fordgtlover is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 01:29 AM   #2 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
cotdt's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: San Diego/Los Angeles
Posts: 2,994

IM Contacts
Send a message via AIM to cotdt
Default

You forgot...

Resolving - ability to separate between intruments and express clear notes. Difference between "detail" and "resolution" is that detail is the psychological effect, and thus can be created by accentuated treble. Resolution is the actual information that is passed through.
cotdt is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 01:33 AM   #3 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
jinp6301's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Binghamton, NY/Bayside, NY
Posts: 2,637
Default

this is great. it'll be so useful to the newbies around here

sticky?
__________________
ipod 60gb 5G -> mini^3 -> Altec Lansing im716
iRiver ihp-140 (optical)/Foobar v0.9.5-> EMU 0404 USB -> M^3 w/ STEPS -> Woodied Grado SR225
LastFM
Feedback
jinp6301 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 01:35 AM   #4 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
Morph201's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Wherever I lay my head at the moment!
Posts: 2,187
Default

Where's 'SHRILL'... ??? I was kinda hoping I used it correctly!
__________________
Home Rig: Coby mp3 -> Boostaroo -> Bose Triports!

Gone but not forgotten:
Ratshack buds


Team Ilikeeverydamthang!
-Morph201
Morph201 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 01:35 AM   #5 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
cotdt's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Aug 2005
Location: San Diego/Los Angeles
Posts: 2,994

IM Contacts
Send a message via AIM to cotdt
Default

there's also all these terms like "headstage" and "3-blob soundstage" etc.
cotdt is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 01:36 AM   #6 (permalink)
100+ Head-Fi'er

Profile
Join Date: Apr 2006
Posts: 248
Default

For fun, I am going to use these terms to better state my opinion of the K701 (my favorite headphone out of what I have heard so far).

Traits that I think the K701 has or is good at producing:

airy, bright, dry, edgy, sibilant, thin.


Traits that I think the K701 does not have or STRONGLY lacks or is poor at producing:

attack, bassy, blanketed, bloated, body, boomy, boxy, breathy, chesty, dark, depth, dynamic, euphonic, fat, focus, full, imaging, juicy, musical (or musicality), puffy, punchy, rich, smooth, snap, sturdy, thick, timbre, tinny, transient, tubby, warm, weighty.
__________________
X-Fi -> Stax SRM-252II -> Stax SR-202

X-Fi -> (optical cable) -> E-Mu 0404USB -> Sennheiser PX 100

Other audio stuff: AKG K501, Koss KSC-35, Etymotic ER-4P, AKG K701, Sennheiser HD-595, Grado SR-225, AKG K81DJ, Creative Zen V Plus (2 GB), LiTe DAC-AH, those cheap Insignia speakers that were popular a while back
ferraro25 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 05:08 AM   #7 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
fordgtlover's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Nov 2006
Location: Canberra, Australia
Posts: 1,852
Default

cotdt - the term Definition made reference to Resolution so I have included a reference. Does this address your issue?

As to terms such as "headstage" and "3-blob soundstage", I can't find defintions for these terms.

Morph201 - regarding the term shrill, I have no specific objections to adding the term, but it is worth noting that the dictionary definition of shrill is clear. Most of the words in this list don't have a dictionary meaning to explain their audio meaning. To illustrate the point, dictionary.com has 26 results for the word warm, but none of the results relate directly to the impression of music or sound.

I am only facilitating the list. I am happy to add words as others see fit.

Do others think that words should be included in this list if there is already a clear dictionary meaning relating to music or audio?
fordgtlover is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 05:26 AM   #8 (permalink)
100+ Head-Fi'er
 
user18's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: SF
Posts: 386
Default

I think it would be good to add them. Because if you don't, you'll just get people saying, "hey, you're missing soundstage... etc"

From reading other threads, headstage is a play on the word soundstage. Since soundstage should exist within an actual room, when people use the word soundstage to describe what they hear, they are actually referring to perceived soundstage. It's just semantics. Sort of like a 3-D drawing. It's not really 3-D and for some people it's a major pet pieve, but hey, to each his own.
__________________
Headphones: HD 280 Pros, Ultrasone Proline 750, Alessandro MS1, ATH-A950LTD, AKG-K701, ATH-W5000, APS Recabled Denon D5000
Amps: Heed Canamp, RSA Predator
DIY: PPAv1, Pimeta, Mini3, CK²III; Bijou, β22 planned

Feedback
user18 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 05:30 AM   #9 (permalink)
500+ Head-Fi'er
 
exX08's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Dec 2006
Posts: 740
Default

x2 sticky!
exX08 is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Old 02-04-2007, 05:33 AM   #10 (permalink)
Headphoneus Supremus
 
jmmtn4aj's Avatar

Profile
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Singapore
Posts: 1,979
Default

Now I shall hope everyone uses the term in the same way you do
__________________

Speaker E-MU 1212m, Pioneer PD-204 & Rotel RT-850A Denon AVC-3530 Mission 761i | Mission 760i


Semi-Portable MacBook Westone UM2


jmmtn4aj is offline  
Digg this Post!Add Post to del.icio.usBookmark Post in TechnoratiFurl this Post!Reddit!Facebook it!
Reply With Quote
Reply


Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Trackbacks are On
Pingbacks are On
Refbacks are On




Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.8
Copyright ©2000 - 2008, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Search Engine Friendly URLs by vBSEO 3.1.0 Head-Fi.org
All times are GMT. The time now is 04:31 AM.