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I'm happy (nay, smug) to report that, after warmup, my system (CD5X, Nait 5i, Epos M12.2s) has no "bad days". I've somehow gotten out of that hypercritical listening habit I had when using Olive kit, etc. The entry-level Naim stuff is simply "sufficient"; I enjoy listening to music with it.
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| Posts: 1339 | Location: Newcastle, Washington, USA | Registered: Fri 04 June 2004 |   |
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Brian;
If I'm really tired or stressed, everything sounds crap. I do something else.
I know that for some, music on their system can soothe the pains of a bad day. Not for me.
At the other end of the scale, it sounds bloody amazing when I'm mentally refreshed in the morning after a good night's sleep.
John.
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| Posts: 5063 | Location: Norwich, Norfolk UK | Registered: Tue 11 December 2001 |   |
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my system never seems to have an "off day" unlike me......however it loves the occasional duster and this week has been showing off playing The Rolling Stones' 'Jump Back' 1971-93 'specially when 'er indoors is outdoors!.
dennis
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| Posts: 144 | Location: Waterfoot,Scotland | Registered: Tue 21 January 2003 |   |
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Being a little slow on the uptake, a thought just occurred to me: could it be that the newer "black" kit is less temperamental than the older "olive" stuff? I did have good days'n'bad days when I had 62/90 and 72/140 etc; there were days when the music was just gripping and present in the room. Other days it sounded hard and almost shrill. I had/have no dedicated mains, so there's my suspicion.
Also, I notice much less change from power-up with my 5X/i series stuff; after I came back from Mexico two weeks ago, it was pretty much listenable from the moment I plugged the Wiremold back into the wall.
What does it all mean?
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| Posts: 1339 | Location: Newcastle, Washington, USA | Registered: Fri 04 June 2004 |   |
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Senior Member
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Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music, The Residents' Eskimo and a bit of Throbbing Gristle.
Kevin
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| Posts: 1524 | Location: Saaarf London | Registered: Wed 07 August 2002 |   |
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I'm not saying it isn't almost completely psychological - perhaps I should rephrase the question, to:
What do you listen to when it just isn't happening, but you still want music ?
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| Posts: 67 | Location: Manchester, UK | Registered: Sun 29 August 2004 |   |
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Senior Member
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The Smiths
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| Posts: 1613 | Location: South Gloucestershire UK | Registered: Tue 01 August 2000 |   |
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Member
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The Wall, music to slash your wrist by........
Andy
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| Posts: 360 | Location: MA | Registered: Wed 06 December 2000 |   |
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quote: Originally posted by Kevin-W: Lou Reed's Metal Machine Music, The Residents' Eskimo and a bit of Throbbing Gristle.
Kevin
personally i think that eskimo is something of an audiophile recording [and not just by the rez's standards]! in answer to the question - endless live dead soundboards, they are sort of impervious to good and bad sound days [i.e. they just sound great and obviously i don't have preconceptions of high quality recordings to be disappointed by]. Leopold
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| Posts: 45 | Location: Leicester, UK | Registered: Mon 30 October 2000 |   |
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quote: Being a little slow on the uptake, a thought just occurred to me: could it be that the newer "black" kit is less temperamental than the older "olive" stuff? I did have good days'n'bad days when I had 62/90 and 72/140 etc; there were days when the music was just gripping and present in the room. Other days it sounded hard and almost shrill.
Yes bhazen - I agree. My dealer rates one of the great attributes of the latest 'Reference' series stuff as its consistency of performance. I used to have 'Olive' active 52/250's into SBL's and became utterly jarred off with it. One day it sounded blinding - the next; as you describe. Believe or not; I went back to 'passive' with a 202/HC/250.2 and was much happier. I've since moved back up to CDS3/252/300, and still have consistency of performance. The prime variable now, is me! (and the mains supply) Some advocates of the 'Olive' sound perceive the 'Reference' sound to be somewhat sanitised by comparison. Personal taste, as ever. John.
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| Posts: 5063 | Location: Norwich, Norfolk UK | Registered: Tue 11 December 2001 |   |
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Senior Member
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This is going to sound awfully smug and virtuous but now that I've downgraded to a cheap CD player and a pair of headphones my system never has bad days!
It took me a year to get used to it but now I'm able to enjoy listening to not only CDs but also 192 kbit/s MP3s that have been burnt to CD.
I listen to whatever I like, whenever I like without caring whether it captures anything approaching the full emotional effect of the recording. For now, at least, "some" is enough...
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| Posts: 1460 | Location: Pale Blue Dot | Registered: Mon 01 July 2002 |   |
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Senior Member
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Mary Black, "Circus" I once read a piece about the one disc that an Astronaut would take into space with him and this was the one. So I bought it and although I will never have the opportunity to fly into the wide blue yonder,on bad days I can put this on and be transported.
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| Posts: 694 | Location: Cairns, QLD, Australia | Registered: Mon 01 November 2004 |   |
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hi.
when my system has a bad day i listen to sad song or hardrock. than my adreline will go up and will lose my agression.
maria
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