Once often asked during the rise of Seattle Grunge movement, do playing recorded “grunge” guitars on your hi-fi kit eventually destroy your tweeters?
By: Ringo Bones
Part of the rationale of owning a really good hi-fi rig is the ability to play loud without hurting your ears with aggro of distortion. Surprisingly, I’ve just recently found out as recently as a couple of weeks ago that there are still really – I mean really – naïve audiophiles who genuinely believe that playing recordings of “grunge guitars” – i.e. highly distorted and very loud electric guitar passages can eventually result in tweeter damage of your loudspeaker. I don’t know if these naïve audiophiles ever actually heard one played live or been in a Nirvana or a Soundgarden concert, so it is yet premature to judge. But the “assumption” that such “hot guitar tone” can fry tweeters is partly based on misinformation over amplifier clipping.
Every audiophile and hi-fi rig owner knows that pushing a power amplifier into hard clipping – i.e. playing it too loud that it no longer sounds nice – will “fry” or burn out your loudspeakers’ tweeter coil because the clipped waveforms contain much more high-frequency energy than a typical music signal. Given this truism in the physics behind the workings of electronic amplifiers, one will thus be curious enough to ask: “What happens when the music itself naturally contains heavily distorted clipped sounds – like those in loudly played and distorted electric guitars played through a fuzz pedal set on high or even extremely high? Will this result in tweeter damage too?
The truth – fortunately to us rockers – is that distortion produced by electric guitars played through “fuzz” or distortion pedals being set to extreme grunge is not nearly as destructive in comparison to actual amplifier clipping. Sound quality wise, I really don’t believe that the distortion tone created by guitarists and their special equipment is nearly as rich in harmonics as the distortion produced when a power amplifier truly clips.
The upper frequency of the harmonics produced by an overdriven guitar amp is limited by the instrument amp – which is more likely vacuum tube equipped with an output transformer coupled into a single-coned electric guitar loudspeaker – and the medium in which the instrument is recorded on – i.e. analog magnetic tape running at 30 inches per second. Ultimately restricting the bandwidth of a loudly played distorted electric guitar to lows of about 75-Hz to highs of about 5,000-Hz.
Just listening to such Seattle Grunge music makes me feel that much of the distortion behind its distinctive tone occurs at midrange frequencies where our ears are most sensitive to, rising into the treble range but decreasing in amplitude as the frequencies of the harmonics rise. A typical “clean” jazz guitar track played on a vacuum tube-equipped combo guitar amp typically measures 200 to 300 % total harmonic distortion. The electric guitars in a typical Seattle Grunge rock’s total harmonic distortion figure probably lies closer to 1,000% THD or even more.
Furthermore, if tweeters were actually being destroyed during playback of such music, older audiophiles would have read about it in 1990s era hi-fi magazines. And might even necessitate labelling such cassettes and CDs back then with warnings of potential tweeter damage when played loud in addition to the PMRC Parental Advisory, Explicit Lyrics warning stickers. Fortunately for music lovers of the world, no tweeters had even been martyred alongside Kurt Cobain during the heyday of Seattle Grunge.
Thursday, September 16, 2010
Audiophilia Nervosa: Ear Pornography’s Inevitable Consequence?
The “audiophile disease” that first gained widespread notice during the mid 1990s, is audiophilia nervosa the inevitable consequence of compulsive hi-fi tweaking?
By: Ringo Bones
This insidious “audiophile disease” can easily infect an unwary audiophile noticing how a DIY RG-58 cable being used as an ad-hoc interconnect managed to sound way much better – sound quality wise - than the “scrawny” freebie interconnect that came with the newly-purchased CD / DVD player. And before you know it – especially if you’re not careful – audiophilia nervosa is often that not far behind, but should it be?
From my perspective, it usually afflicts audiophiles with a fairly narrow musical taste – genre wise. Or those intentionally unwilling to explore other genres of music are highly susceptible. Depending upon one’s perspective, a music reproduction system – namely the hi-fi rig that you own – should not influence which music you play on it. But more often than not, many hi-fi systems do.
Now is the time to ask yourself, does your hi-fi system make you exited about the music you play – or the way it sounds? If it is the latter, it’s no doubt you have now an advanced case of audiophilia nervosa and should take steps – really careful steps – to avoid forgetting your record collection. In a perfect world, your hi-fi rig should steer you – the listener – away from itself by letting the style and content of music carry you away. But more often than not, one is more likely distracted by overkill bass and supermarket tabloid style attention-grabbing treble. Well, at least my current hi-fi rig can play a well recorded rock drum kit way better than the hi-fi currently being stocked at our local mall. Or was it making the recorded singers sound like their right in front of me?
By: Ringo Bones
This insidious “audiophile disease” can easily infect an unwary audiophile noticing how a DIY RG-58 cable being used as an ad-hoc interconnect managed to sound way much better – sound quality wise - than the “scrawny” freebie interconnect that came with the newly-purchased CD / DVD player. And before you know it – especially if you’re not careful – audiophilia nervosa is often that not far behind, but should it be?
From my perspective, it usually afflicts audiophiles with a fairly narrow musical taste – genre wise. Or those intentionally unwilling to explore other genres of music are highly susceptible. Depending upon one’s perspective, a music reproduction system – namely the hi-fi rig that you own – should not influence which music you play on it. But more often than not, many hi-fi systems do.
Now is the time to ask yourself, does your hi-fi system make you exited about the music you play – or the way it sounds? If it is the latter, it’s no doubt you have now an advanced case of audiophilia nervosa and should take steps – really careful steps – to avoid forgetting your record collection. In a perfect world, your hi-fi rig should steer you – the listener – away from itself by letting the style and content of music carry you away. But more often than not, one is more likely distracted by overkill bass and supermarket tabloid style attention-grabbing treble. Well, at least my current hi-fi rig can play a well recorded rock drum kit way better than the hi-fi currently being stocked at our local mall. Or was it making the recorded singers sound like their right in front of me?
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