Are you the judge?
I've always thought that the only way for me to be judge over the music I'm playing is to learn what all is involved in the entire audio chain process. Early on I use to read reviews and even though I have a background in recording and enegineering the thought of someone giving that thumbs up or down on something was to be followed like a road map. It didn't take me long to realize how subjective reviews are and how any review is based on a limited exposure experience, and those experiences can really be pretty hit or miss depending on a lot of conditions. Don't mean to knock any reviewer off of their cloud, but lets be real. Discovering what is involved in a recording or any piece of equipment is not done in a month, and it's not done with our own personal set few reference recordings. The world of music is simply much larger than this and everyone who is part of the process (including the listener) makes up the jury.
A wise judge to me is someone who is able to look at all the evidence and base a decision on how open or close minded they are in their belief abilities, to make a fair conclusion. Someone who is always in learn mode is always going to be wiser than someone who has put limits on their understanding.
In audio there are lots of levels of listening and understanding, and I have found that if you study things as a whole you will go much futher than the guy who takes passages out of context to build their own case, instead of "the" case. There are things in music that just are, and no matter how long it takes for this industry to get to that point the end result will be the same.
One of the great opportunities this hobby gives us is choice. There are Q&A's that can be discovered forever if we want. I constantly read reviews on "the greatest product ever" and smile, cause I know that this may last a week month or year only to be replaced with "the next greatest product ever". This is called marketing and honestly has very little to do with music and sound. Music and sound is much more of an exploration than a monthly what's new fix. Music and the recording and playing back of it has roots, and these roots mean more to us when we take our eyes off of our latest purchase or fantasy purchase and put those eyes, and more importantly ears, on the music and the whys and hows of music.
What sounds bad or good can be as shalow as our lack of understanding, or as deep as our abilities. Our willingness to do and explore will make the difference in what level of listening we raise ourselves to. It has nothing to do with dollar spending or brand names, reviews or having the most accurate test equipment. Music has to been "done" to experience and understand.
Yesterday my buddy bought a Shelby GT 500 (black on black) convertable. Hopefully he'll at least let me sit in the passenger seat lol. When he took it out for a spin he described two different versions of the story to me. The first was him in the passenger seat and the other with him in the driver seat. The first story was about the glorious ride of perfection, the second was the awkward new owner.
Music is something you have to drive to experience. The more you drive it one of two things is going to happen. One you are going to learn every part from every angle start to finish including driving on many roads and conditions, and the second is you'll go out to the garrage to start it up once and a while, maybe take it around the block and have friends come over to covet and leave. At the end of the day, your going to apperiate what music is, or make excuses of why you can't drive it or keep it in-tune.
For some owning it is enough, for others getting every last drop is job one.
michael green
MGA/RoomTune
http://tuneland.techno-zone.net/