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ISSUE
24
march/april 2006
Auroville 38:
Right. Wrong
by Srajan Ebaen
Anyone who's
been at this reviewing game for a while will concur. It's easy to come
up with a collection of reader e-mails that so completely affirm one's
own findings as to create the illusion of personal infallibility. "I
just purchased the Flaming Attack amplifier you recommended to mate with
the Pines of Rome speakers. Man, you nailed it. I've got Flaming Pines
now. Best sound I ever had. You've got the Platinum Ears in this
business." And so on. Cover your refrigerator with sticky post-its and
bask in the short-lived glory.
Part of the secret to papal reviewer status is that most end users
simply don't have access to extensive comparisons. Unless your
recommendation is a complete dog or plain won't work in a particular
system inquired about, it's relatively easy to cultivate such responses.
But for every hit a reviewer scores -- not the review per se but
confirmation from actual owners—there should be countless
embarrassing flops on the unmentioned side of the board. Shouldn't
there? I mean, there's only one pope. And he ain't reviewing HiFi.
Actually, a good reviewer should always be right. And always
wrong. It's simply a function of consistency. If you always call it as
you hear it; if your hearing doesn't decline nor your tastes take an
obscure off ramp from your customary main highway—you can't ever be
wrong. By definition. It's simply about telling the truth. Your truth.
That's it. It means that those who hear like you to share your
professed preferences, biases and sensibilities, will view you with
infallibility. You've become the man. Those who don't will infallibly
call you wrong. That still makes you utterly reliable. As the anti man.
Mind you, I'm not talking about conclusions or overall rankings in the
greater scheme of things. Such exploits are beset with error. Not only
is the terrain an ever-changing mine field, the endless synergy concerns
go beyond any single reviewer's ability to catalogue and predict. Plus,
nobody has yet heard everything available to know what's best (not that
a fixed "best" exists in the first place). No, I'm simply talking about
descriptions of how something sounded. To you.
If
you call it accurately, you will always be right (even if the
conclusions you draw from it are not). It's very much like measurements.
If they're taken consistently and under clearly defined and published
circumstances, they can't be wrong. They simply are what they are.
Commentary explaining what they ought to mean and whether they're
acceptable, stellar or below par? Well, now we're getting on slippery
interpretative ground. Granted, it's a slippery slope experts are
supposed to brave and tread. But readers are always advised to separate:
between hard fact (whether subjective as listener commentary or
so-called objective as a bench rest result or graph) on the one hand;
and interpretations regarding meaning, context and value of those facts
on the other.
To an
individual, likes or dislikes are fact. They may not be to anyone else
but to that one person, they're objective truth and acted upon in like
fashion. That's how the subjective turns objective. It's the context of
the individual rather than the universal that makes it so (compliments
to Cap'n Picard). That's how well-done audio reviews become both
subjective and objective, simultaneously. They're subjective only in the
sense that their objectivism centers on individual rather than global
perspective. If I despise someone, no so-called proof to the contrary
will change my feelings. I have my personal experiences and gut-level
reactions. To me, they're fact and reality. Objective. To you, they
could be the same. Then it's simple agreement that makes it so. Or you
could vehemently object and call it all imagination, skewed
understanding or plain error. Now disagreement makes it so. None of
these secondary reactions—affirmative or contrary—alter the
objectivity of where we began; with the reviewer's actual "how did it
sound to me" commentary.
The
only prerequisite in my book then is consistency to play this game.
Always use the same yardstick. That is the only burden of
responsibility a reviewer ultimately carries. Whatever your beliefs,
state them for all to see. Whatever your limitations in terms of
exposure and experience, state them for all to know. Then simply be
honest and truthful. That's all any reasonable participant (reader or
manufacturer) can and should expect. Anything beyond that is silliness
or based on self delusions of grandeur whereby a writer presumes to be
more important than he is or know more than he does or be in possession
of a universally applicable yard stick. In the end, there's only one
Pope. To my knowledge, there hasn't been an audio reviewer in the
Vatican yet. Hence, universal infallibility is beyond our ken, HP
included. However, good reviewers are infallible in their own
way. They never err if they say exactly what they heard. How many good
reviewers according to this definition exist? That isn't for me but you
to say. This "good" is clearly not about the quality of writing. It's
not about the cleverness of syntax or metaphor or the mastery of rhythm
and punctuation. It's simply about consistency and making this
consistency transparent to the audience.
Such
consistency isn't easy to come by. It relies on the writer's ability to
separate personal moodiness and momentary disability from how those
psychological factors impact data acquisition—what is heard and how it
is heard. The road to consistency is experience. How much time have you
put in. How much more time will you dedicate to this endeavor in the
face of online criticism, widespread corruption in the profession and
little hard payback beyond the personal satisfaction of having shared
something you're enthusiastic and passionate about?
Those are very personal questions. They merit equally personal answers. I can
only speak for myself then when I say that applying oneself
wholeheartedly to anything creates focus and constancy. Those
forces act like a forge. Impurities are melted, base materials are
refined and the constant hammering of engagement creates a more defined
shape in the psychology of the men or women who, by applying themselves,
are simultaneously being worked on. It's the old "it's not what you do
but how you do it" rule. Something as mundane and trifling as audio
reviewing can become a viable ongoing discipline. Its real personal
benefits completely transcend the superficial benefits of access to
goods and discounted pricing for the occasional personal acquisition
which naysayers often quote as the sole underlying motivation for
becoming a reviewer. How many components could you possibly own? Trust
me, that gets old in a hurry. Were it not for the constancy of my chosen
occupation and—due to owning this site—the inherent freedom to
apply it without compromise and regard for committee and consensus,
writing about audio toys relevant only to the affluent with enough time
for music listening would feel like a terrible waste of time. Especially
considering the general global situation.
To
the writer, audio reviewing can become a craft and art to be honed and
be honed by. It doesn't require that anyone else thinks you're great at
it. As long as you improve beyond where you began and do what's
necessary to continue improving rather than go on automatic mass
production, the magic of getting shaped by what you do is in full
effect. In the end, it's about communicating hard-to-communicate
observations and emotional reactions. It's wonderful exercise to talk
audio, sound and the effects of music on a listener. Grappling with the
intangible elements thereof means we simultaneously exercise our ability
to talk about love, dreams and spiritual matters—other things that
tend to be very real to us but often become nebulous and vague in the
talking about them. It's this that makes audio discussions so
interesting for this writer. It's a context to refine personal ability
of translating feelings and sensory stimuli into plain words that
properly convey intention. That's already a lot less mundane than audio
toys. Add the spiritual dimension of what music listening can mean and
suddenly, the much-maligned gig of audio reviewing doesn't look so
shabby after all. Good. Hey, I just convinced myself. I'm gonna keep
this job for a little while longer...
Visit Srajan at his site www.6moons.com
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