Lonely Raven
Seasoned Member
  

Jack of all Trades, Master of None
Posts: 3567
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I agree - Steve's amps were always very "honest" representing the music very well, and I feel his time with Reel to Reel master recordings has helped him better understand what density *is*. Once you've heard these master tapes, on any Decware amp, you get an appreciation for how much information there is on tape that our more common media formats just don't reproduce. So knowing what that sound is like, when you get something like that in an amp design, your ear catches it and you push that envelop further to see how much density you can get out. Steve's OTL has always been the King of Density to me, and I too feel the 25th Anniversary mods reveal more of that.
As for speed - I've always felt timing was very important to music, and it's why analog formats like the LP have hung around. The record could be a little off/warped, your turntable a little slow or a little fast, but the inherent timing of the recorded instruments on the pico level will at least be consistent with itself. I think a slower amp can help smooth over timing issues (jitter) in the digital realm, and a faster amp helps reveal good timing, which makes for more realism, timbre, and better PRaT.
Sorry, that was a lot of stream of consciousness bla bla bla.
Ultimately, I think truly holographic, realistic sound needs both timing/speed and density. Which is why everyone should experience master tapes at some point; so they know what's possible and when their setup is on the right path towards it.
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