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Gazzip said:Pedro2 said:I think it has got to be a brain issue. There are times when I can listen to music for hours and enjoy it thoroughly. At other times, my mood will dictate otherwise. Sometimes, I can't face listening to music at all. If my head is full of life's cares and worries, I just find music too much, irrespective of genre. Fortunately, this happens only rarely. Bright or sibilant sound only shortens my tollerance , however!
I reckon Pedro2 and BlueBrazil have it spot on. I am listening to the same album this morning that I was listening to last night. Last night I was in music heaven. This morning this album is dead to me.
Trying to put my finger on the difference I would say that last night I was listening to the music but that today I am listening to my HiFi.
Gazzip said:The only other difference is that last night there was a clothes horse that was loaded with drying socks and pants sitting between my speakers. This has now been unloaded and put away.
I suggested to my wife that they may have been acting as some kind of acoustic buffer. She scoffed, countering that my pants are anything but an acoustic buffer but she wished that they were.
SteveR750 said:Gazzip said:The only other difference is that last night there was a clothes horse that was loaded with drying socks and pants sitting between my speakers. This has now been unloaded and put away.
I suggested to my wife that they may have been acting as some kind of acoustic buffer. She scoffed, countering that my pants are anything but an acoustic buffer but she wished that they were.
I am trying to comprehend the basic concept of underwear as an acoustic buffer in any other situation other than the random act of drying clothes...!
your very right about that.matthewpiano said:Watch one episode of The Voice and you'll fully understand what listener fatigue is.
It could be bright, could be mis-match, it certainly becomes tiring to listen to.haider said:gel said:I get it from listening to headphones and home cinema systems that are wrongly matched up with amp and speakers.
Yes, but do you have any incling why? Is it too bright for istance?
Haider (of Sonneteer)
Agreed too.Native_bon said:your very right about that.matthewpiano said:Watch one episode of The Voice and you'll fully understand what listener fatigue is.
SteveR750 said:Gazzip said:The only other difference is that last night there was a clothes horse that was loaded with drying socks and pants sitting between my speakers. This has now been unloaded and put away.
I suggested to my wife that they may have been acting as some kind of acoustic buffer. She scoffed, countering that my pants are anything but an acoustic buffer but she wished that they were.
I am trying to comprehend the basic concept of underwear as an acoustic buffer in any other situation other than the random act of drying clothes...!
haider said:Gazzip said:haider said:gel said:I get it from listening to headphones and home cinema systems that are wrongly matched up with amp and speakers.
Yes, but do you have any incling why? Is it too bright for istance?
Haider (of Sonneteer)
Surely it is anything that doesn't suit the individual's ear? Anything that grates on them which is purely subjective/personal.
Yes perhaps, but doesn't the experience you are describing suggest this is not an Ear issue? I may be wrong but I am convinced that when I do experience it, my ears ache. I hence I make a great effort to design it out. Good design practice, which we have developed, seems to ultimately eliminate it. We have a lot of theroy as to why, but outside of probable cause, effect, eliminate, we have nothing to say it is no more than a secondary or by product.
Haider (of Sonneteer)
p.s. someone missus needs an upgrade ;-)
Gazzip said:SteveR750 said:Gazzip said:The only other difference is that last night there was a clothes horse that was loaded with drying socks and pants sitting between my speakers. This has now been unloaded and put away.
I suggested to my wife that they may have been acting as some kind of acoustic buffer. She scoffed, countering that my pants are anything but an acoustic buffer but she wished that they were.
I am trying to comprehend the basic concept of underwear as an acoustic buffer in any other situation other than the random act of drying clothes...!
The socks definitely affected the need for toe in.
steve_1979 said:Gazzip said:Pedro2 said:I think it has got to be a brain issue. There are times when I can listen to music for hours and enjoy it thoroughly. At other times, my mood will dictate otherwise. Sometimes, I can't face listening to music at all. If my head is full of life's cares and worries, I just find music too much, irrespective of genre. Fortunately, this happens only rarely. Bright or sibilant sound only shortens my tollerance , however!
It could of course be much simpler than that. In the morning the whole world has its Kettle on, Toaster charring their seeded bread, and DAB radios torturing their ears. These all leave their mark on the mains supply which is part of your system. Often this makes things just sound a bit rubbish. Oh and a lower than normal ambient temperature can crispen up the ambience so to speak.
But this is just disliking what you hear rather than fatigue surely?
When I am tired I can put on 'Physical Graffiti' just as much as 'Under the Pink' to relax and unwind. Music is supposed to be relaxing too is it not? Anything other would suggest the reproduction system you have is just not doing its job.
I find Y fronts better than slips at dispersing over eager treble.
haider (of Sonneteer)http://sonneteer.co.uk
I reckon Pedro2 and BlueBrazil have it spot on. I am listening to the same album this morning that I was listening to last night. Last night I was in music heaven. This morning this album is dead to me.
Trying to put my finger on the difference I would say that last night I was listening to the music but that today I am listening to my HiFi.
Yes mood and tiredness can make a huge difference when listening to music.
MajorFubar said:My understanding of what listening fatigue is completely different. Coming from a music production perspective, albeit an amateur one, what 'we' call listening fatigue is when you're trying to mix a song, you've listened to it for so long tweaking this and that to get the mix 'just right', and you lose track of whether the changes you're making are better or just different. Your ears grow tired of hearing the same thing and you can't judge the sound properly. So you put it away for a day or even just a few hours, then listen again and you're like "my god that's cr-p". Maybe these are opposite perspectives of a phenomena with exactly the same root cause.
Gazzip said:The only other difference is that last night there was a clothes horse that was loaded with drying socks and pants sitting between my speakers. This has now been unloaded and put away.
I suggested to my wife that they may have been acting as some kind of acoustic buffer. She scoffed, countering that my pants are anything but an acoustic buffer but she wished that they were.