Columns Retired Columns & Blogs |
My preamp has no tone controls, but the crossover to the Entec woofers in my system has a bass "cut" control that I can use to tailor the bass to a given recording.
Reader Stephen M. Rose wants <I>Stereophile</I> readers to confess their audio sins. Do you ever use tone controls in your current system?
I do on very *rare* occasion use the tone controls for fun. However they tend to only result in artificial sound at best. Even if the bass control boosted the correct frequencies to balance my smallish speakers, I would be trying to force my speakers to do what they cannot. And there are better ways to solve that problem. I must admit I do use the tone controls in my car, but that is a completely different story, bad environment and a factory stereo.
More reasons: Screechy recordings, anemic bass on CD transfers, it's after 10pm and I live in an apartmentthe bass control improves low level listening. My 50-year-old ears just don't hear the high frequencies like they used to.
I have two systems. My original 1980 Sony receiver, don't laugh, it actually sounds pretty good. With it I can make judcious use of the tone controls to enhance the sound depending on which speakers I am using. There is absolutly no degradation of the sound quality using the tone controls, only more of what ever tone it is I need. On my main 2-channel system I have a seperate Pre-Amp. It is a Yamaha CX-2 ultimately driving a pair of Thiel 22 speakers. The CX-2 has a little switch they call "Pure Direct". With the Pure Direct feature off you can use the tone controls. With it on you completely bypass the tone controls. When they say Pure Direct they are not kidding. With it on you get true High End sound quality. With it off the advantage of being able to use the tone controls is completely negated appearently by including circuits that muddy the sound to the point that it is unlistenable.
Yes, I confess. I am guilty of the ultimate audio atrocity. I . . . I . . . I . . . use an equalizer in my stereo! There, I said it. My conscience is already starting to subside. Seriously, a good equalizer, along with a good system, can make a good sounding stereo a great one when used properly. Audiophiles need to get over themselves and the notion that music on a CD or vinyl record is somehow a sacred, untouchable relic that dare not be altered by mortal hands. How much processing do you think has already happenned between the microphone and the CD? My stereo is quite good, but with a modest amount of tone correction, it borders on fantastic. I use an equalizer and I make no apologies for it.
Well, in my second system my speakers are high sensitivity, one way drivers. They really sound great. As they are part of the main system in the living room, I do not put the speaker grills off (WAF), but increase the treble a bit by 1-2 dB instead. Sound is more than okay, and God save the tone controls! For less than perfect systems, they are very welcome if not massively used.
Very very occasionallythere are four or five CDs in my collection that are extremely nasty in the upper frequencies. Tone controls may degrade absolute sound quality, but in these circumstances I prefer an adulterated (but listenable) version of a badly-recorded disc to a perfectly reproduced (but unpleasant) sound.
About 99.5% of the time I listen in "Direct" mode. But I have a few recordings that have either woofer-poofing bass or with torturesome trebleeither of which must be backed off to be listenable. Once I'm done listening to those pieces though, I re-engage tone defeat.
I have a Cambridge Audio A1 Mk3 integrated amp, and even though it has bass and treble controls, when you use them it doesn't have that much of an effect on the sound. They aren't there for major correction, only for subtle changes in the low frequencies or high fequencies. So, I never use the controls. There simply is no use for them, anyways, my system,(NAD 502 cd player, Audio Alchemy v1.2 DAC, Cambridge Audio A1 Mk3 Integrated Amp, and Polk Audio R10 mini monitors connected with Tara Labs cables) sounds awesome. I am 16-years-old, so my dad has greatly influenced me to be an auiophile. On his Melos pre-amplifier, there are no treble or balance controls simply because his preamp produces such quality music reproduction there is no need to change the way it sounds.
Use Yamaha NS1000M speakers for front left and right and B&W CDMSE for center. Turned the high and mid controls of NS1000s to -3dB for better speaker match across front. Use Lexicon DC-1 for LF crossover and directing LF to appropriate speakers. Does this count?
I have found that with high-end gear, the controls are not present. I first discovered this with a Classe CP35 preamp. I was bummed. But then I discovered that a good quality preamp portrays such transparency that tone controls weren't needed. On my present Levinson No.380, the transparency is even greater and the introduction of any circuit into the signal path always has a detrimental effect on the sound quality. Any "tuning" of the sound can be accomplished through the judicial selection of the appropriate interconnect cables.