This is a very interesting topic to me. I've been working for the last two or three years on improving my digital source. In hindsight, I realize that there are two parts of this to me.
First, which sounds "clearer" to me? This is subjective and not related to data/testing. Clarity is the most important "term" that I would use when I prefer one source over another. But it is often only possible to tell the level of clarity with a switch from one to the other. Kind of like looking through two panes of glass. Both "look" clean but one has a bit of very smooth, even film of residue on it that you can't really see (no spots, for example) but when you compare it to the other pane of glass that is cleaner, it is easy to see that it isn't as clear. It is the contrast of the two that allows you to see the (relative) lack of clarity. This may be distortion, S/N, jitter, timing, etc. All combined, it is clarity relative to the other source that I am looking for.
Second, I find that if every album sounds different, that is the better source. To be clear, this is every album sounds "different" not every album sounds "better" by the way. The less developed sources tend to have a "house sound" to them that makes all recordings generally sound similar. What I have discovered is that if some sound more full, round, and soft while others sound more thin, edgy, and detailed, then my source is more accurate. I am actually hearing what is recorded, not the equipment being used. This often takes some getting used to, however. I find that, sometimes, I actually like the sound of the less accurate source better on one particular album. However, this is short lived as I also find that I prefer to hear the actual recording as presented in the material more, 9 times out of 10. So I am trading a preference of liking 1 out of 10 recordings better vs. 9 out of 10 better. The math is simple. The issue is that I would prefer if they had recorded/mastered a certain album differently...kind of like going to the art museum and liking 9/10ths of the paintings and thinking on that 1/10th painting "why didn't the artist just do it the way I like it." It sounds so simple (i.e. silly to think that way) when talking about paintings in an art museum but sometimes I loose perspective with music in my home.
It is such an interesting journey...
Best,
John
« Last Edit: July 06, 2014, 07:24:04 AM by InfernoSTi »
John Kessel
Hawthorne Audio AMT K2 Reference Speakers
Paramount 300B w/MQ All Nickel Iron, Mundorf S/G 5.5 uF, and Vcap Teflon .1 uF
Auralic Taurus Preamp/Auralic Vega DAC/Auralic Aries Streamer
and lots of room treatments!