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Resolution likewise contributes to clarity. Imagine two mounds of sand in bright
sunlight. One mound is mixed with mud. It’s difficult to see its individual grains.
The other mound is free of mud. You have no trouble seeing its tiny, glittering
bits. And so it is with high-quality audio. The music shines through. Nothing
muddies the sonic image. You hear the texture of a singer’s voice almost as if
she’s in the room. Instrumental timbres allow you to distinguish the purposeful
grunge of the rockers’ guitars. Violas differ from violins, likewise oboes from
English horns. A good sound system allows you to make these listening
distinctions.
Soundstage. Another critically important measure of an audio system’s quality
is its ability to project a convincing soundstage. Can you perceive its width and
depth? Is it realistically proportioned? Can you hear the venue as large or small?
Is it clear to you where the musicians perform within the soundstage?
Depending on the style of recording, our audiophile’s sound system provides
the answers. And of course the pleasures.
Speed. An audio system’s superior speed produces crisp, clean attacks: a violin
or trumpet’s edge, a drummer’s rim shot, a marimba’s wooden loveliness –– all
those little delights that mimic live music.
Bass. To return to trembling pavements and hard-pumping woofer cones, the
audiophile’s guest will be pleasantly surprised to discover that a high-quality
sound system’s low end is as tuneful and clean as the rest of the audio spectrum.
Again, no mud. Just lovely, well-defined sounds. A good audio system aims at
naturalness.