Matt do you have synesthesia by any chance?
Very perceptive!
I’ve wondered about the role of synaesthesia and I brought that issue up here before.
I remember doing a thread on it.
One reason being that I tend to associate colours with sound, and also that more broadly speaking you often see many audio files associating colours with sound.
For instance, there’s something of a trope among some tube fans of associating old Conrad Johnson tube amplifiers as having something of a “ golden” or “ bronze” like tonality or timber. My point and bring that up isn’t to say that it’s true or justifiable. Only that, for whatever reason, i’ve seen many audiophiles adducing certain colours sometimes and trying to describe how they are perceiving something.
When I play my acoustic guitar And I’m closing my eyes I get a sensation of the “ Woody warmth” of the resonating body, and a sort of sparkly golden tonality to the metal strings. I don’t know why, but that’s how those sounds show up in my brain. And when hear a recording of my guitar or similar acoustic guitars through a loudspeaker and it does not ignite those colours in my brain - maybe something more like silver or black-and-white - it feels kind of wrong, like a photograph of my mother’s face where the colour has been green, shifted or something.
As long as I get the right tonal colours occurring in my mind in front of a Soundsystem, then I’m happy and I can enjoy that system for hours on end. I can’t seem to just force this by will, changing the colours I perceive. I’ve owned some loudspeakers that were essentially my dream loudspeakers and terms of aesthetics and what I wanted to work in my system. But they sounded “tmbrally off” and it didn’t matter how many months I tried to stick with those speakers, hoping I would adjust, it never changed. They still produced the same different different timbre/colours in my perception.
So I would sadly sell them.
This is of course, not something I propose objective or translatable to everyone else.
However I HAVE found that when another audiophile or reviewer seems to be describing sound in ways similar to how I hear it, and not similar types of timber colorations as he or she perceives it, then it’s often the case when I hear the same loudspeakers, they seem to be doing the same thing for my perception. Likewise, on other forms when I describe the sound of different speakers, I get some audiophiles saying “ I hear exactly the same things you did with those speakers, you describing the exact impressions they invoked in my perception.” And in those cases, sometimes they have gone on to buy loudspeakers they heard me describe, and I’ve been very happy that they experience the same thing I did.
I don’t know what to make of all that. of course it could be any number of biases going on that happened to be merging or influencing one another. But I still find it interesting. For instance even my perception at my old Conrad Johnson tube amplifiers place a slight upper mid range, lower trouble “ glow” on the sound that seems to be sort of gold and yellow in my mind, has been a very consistent perception, not having faded in the over 20 years I’ve used the amplifiers.
But back to synaesthesia.
From what I’ve read about the phenomenon, I don’t think I have synaesthesia proper. It doesn’t seem to be as overriding and pronounced as what I read about it.
But it’s my hunch that this comes in a range, maybe like autism, and that’s why even people not diagnosed with it may talk in terms of timbral colours. Possibly I am a bit more on the “ spectrum” towards synaesthesia but I wouldn’t know.
I wonder how many other people here have any colours evoked when listening to music and whether it seems reliable.