
7704A
Well-known member
I think this is a key point. My understanding is that our auditory memory is very short, and easily corrupted by our own perception. So by the time you swap speakers/pickups/tubes/crystal lettuces/whatever, unless it took less than around six seconds, your memory of the previous sound is corrupted/inaccurate. I'll have to find where I read that tidbit though, I seem to recall it being somewhere more academic than a guitar forum.But how much of it is only in our head ?
Likewise, I've been amazed at how much doing a blind test changes things. I don't mean Fricker's tests, I mean loading two tracks up in my DAW then running a blind test plug-in on them so I don't know which track is which, but can toggle between them, rate them, and then see the results after. It's completely disorienting, and I didn't realize how much I was anchoring to what I believed the track to be a recording of until I flipped the test switch and suddenly felt completely lost. Ended up with different conclusions about the gear I liked than I started the test with. E.g., I thought I preferred SRO's over EVM12S speakers 'cause of the mids and highs, and that is what I usually heard, but after doing the blind test I noticed that the SRO has the same slightly raspy top that the 12L does, and that the 12S doesn't. Another time I ranked a Swamp Thang above a 12L. I guess my point is, unless the comparison consists of a blind test where the two samples are instantaneously switched between, I don't put much stock in statements from musicians about how much better their rig sounds after changing to wooden control knobs or whatever.