tigon_ridge
1000+ Head-Fier
Quote:
This
[size=7.5pt]Using foobar2k eq:[/size]
[size=7.5pt](increment value is 1 dB)[/size]
[size=7.5pt]-4 55 Hz
-4 77 Hz
-4 110 Hz
-4 156 Hz
-4 220 Hz
-4 311 Hz
-3 440 Hz
-2 622 Hz
-1 880 Hz
0 1.2 kHz
0 1.8 kHz
0 2.5 kHz
0 3.5 kHz
0 5 kHz
-3 7 kHz (sibilance reduction)
-3 10 kHz (sibiliance reduction)
0 14 kHz
0 20 kHz[/size]
I liked it at first but I found myself using it less as I got used to the sound signature more.
Would I also "get used" to its sound and learn to love it? Sure, that's a real possibility. Will I ever prefer that over a more accurate presentation?... I don't think so. You guys' taste in music is not the same as mine. For me, midrange is everything. It can't be colored with any additional warmth (>90% of headphones out there) that wasn't in the original recording; and it can't be, in the slightest bit, pushed aside by additional bass (>95% of headphones) that, again, wasn't in the original recording. It's actually an effect that your brain can never get used to, and I read it somewhere on wikipedia, or some article about psychoachoustics. Basically, when multiple sounds are heard the louder ones grab more of your brains' attention, and as hard as you may try to focus your attention on the less loud ones in order to hear them more fully, you cannot. Therefore, no amount of brain burn-in is going to help you more fully hear the midrange while there is a throbbing mass of background bass sounds trying to get in that bit of the spot light that rightfully belongs more to the midrange.
Most head-fiers will say that a frequency response where bass is higher in decibel than mids, and where lower-mids is higher, yields more musicality to their ears. To my ears, I can't even stand listening to such so-called musical coloration for very long without longing for more clear and accurate vocal presentation. To me accuracy is so critical, because vocalists vary the loudness of each note sung based on the emotion or feeling they are trying to convey. When you color these notes, you color their emotional impact. Suddenly, a passage that is supposed to feel a certain way now feels differently. I would much prefer headphones that stay more faithful to the vocalists' portrayal.
Btw, my current eq setting is slightly different. Keep in mind that your source and amps are different than mine, and you should play around with eq, yourself, to obtain the sound you like best.
@confispect That applies to you, also. Since you asked, here it is, through foobar2k's equalizer:
[size=7.5pt]-4 55 Hz
-4 77 Hz
-4 110 Hz
-4 156 Hz
-4 220 Hz
-3 311 Hz
-2 440 Hz
-1 622 Hz
-0 880 Hz
-0 1.2 kHz
-0 1.8 kHz
-0 2.5 kHz
-0 3.5 kHz
-0 5 kHz
-0 7 kHz
-3 10 kHz (sibiliance reduction)
-0 14 kHz
-0 20 kHz[/size]
As you can see, I prefer to attenuate than accentuate, because the sm3 is already very sensitive; such that I would have to otherwise turn the volume knob even lower on the uDAC. As it is, it gets plenty loud at around 10 o'clock. I notice that the sibilance reduction is just as good as before, so the -3 on the 7kHz band was not necessary. Also, even with the sibilance attenuation, the re0 handled sibilance better than my sm3eq. I don't want to reduce the 10kHz much more than 3 dB as I find the sibilance bearable and am worried about compromising the treble. That might change, as I am still playing around with this.