Steve Deckert
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Below are two definitions of " Bright " from audiophile dictionaries:
Bright: Listening term. Usually refers to too much upper frequency energy.
Bright - A sound that emphasizes the upper midrange/lower treble. Harmonics are strong relative to fundamentals.
Both would indicate an imbalanced frequency response, both would indicate the response is tipped up in the treble.
Naturally I'm going to tell you that Decware products have flat frequency response, because they do. In fact, they have by audiophile definition, a perfect frequency balance.
What Decware products have that the vast majority of main stream hi-fi gear does not, is nearly perfect transparency that of course extends well out into the top end. Listening to these other products, many of which have negative feedback, would have less transparency, less detail and would by comparison thereby sound veiled, softened, or dumbed down a bit. Pleasantly filtered would be another way of putting it.
Comparing Decware gear to the 20% of hi-fi gear that's left, and has similar transparency, one would conclude that our gear is far more palpable and less fatiguing because there is no grain in the top end... a common side effect of miss-guided power supply regulation and a multitude of other things.
Bottom line is that the sound you hear from our products is honest. You get out whatever you put in. For example, during the fest this year the ZCD player was demo'd for 50% of the event, with not only our amplifiers and speakers, but non-Decware amplifiers and speakers too. Not one comment from anyone about it being "Bright".
I have a Blueray player as well, Lon, it's a top of the line Pioneer unit and it sounds very pleasant. It is just soft enough that I can play my "less than audiophile" recordings - mainly 50's jazz, without becoming mortified at the result. Put one of those recordings into the ZCD and you'll be twitching around on the couch. On the flip side, one night I listened to a Jeff Beck concert using my DAC and nearly came to tears during a particular female vocal part. Her voice was incredibly complex and it was really doing things to me. I talked about it for days around here until finally I decided to play it for everyone else. I put it in my Blueray player and we proceeded to listen to the cut. Everyone looked at me like I was nuts, because her voice was not only nothing special, but not even that good. I (rather surprised) agreed. The complexity, detail, timbre, harmonics, were simply gone. I later redeemed myself by playing it back on my DAC and everyone got it that time, in fact we watched the entire thing.
For music lovers who don't let recoding quality dictate what they'll listen to, you need some way to manipulate the playback. Either by having two systems, one low resolution, like the old Macintosh gear, or extra warm, like Conrad Johnson, or if you run super transparent gear, a treble control will make these recordings listenable.
Sorry, but even though you've stated that you don't mean "bright" in the typical sense, you're going to have to work on the language so that the word bright isn't even written.
If you find all recordings exhibit this characteristic brightness, then really start looking at the acoustics in your rooms, or if you're certain that's not the problem just say you have very high sensitivity to treble and leave it at that.
If it were just me it would be my opinion against yours which would be a wash. But I've got 13 years of talking to customers about over 3000 Decware amps, who's feedback has confirmed what I think I'm hearing and given me tremendous confidence in my ears and our equipment.
I too have an elevated sensitivity to treble, in fact it's way more than most people I've listened with in my lifetime. Hundreds and hundreds of hours sitting there secretly wondering how they can stand to listen to that, much less think it sounds good. I am excruciatingly picky about midrange and top end and can not tolerate either one being even the slightest bit over-emphasized and or artificially featured. Basically I can't stand things that sound "characteristically bright" and I know for a fact that my products are not that.
I also would not have responded to this post this thoroughly if at all except that I know people who read the forums who have not owned Decware gear and like me can't stand characteristically bright sounding equipment, would find and read only your post... because that's Murphy's Law.
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