another technique by which the brain uses subtle

parts of the sound to register, interpret and

unconsciously understand what the ears are hearing.

Yet another way humans communicate with each

other beyond just the 'words' themselves.]

Pacing is more natural. Again, this is something that

is almost independent of what we usually descibe as

'tendancy towards foot-tapping'. This had more to do

with the 'flow'. There was something to do with the

very minute parts of the timing that seemed very

natural, reminding me of live acoustic music. That the

beat is spread out over time - not just a

one-a-two-a-three but there are synchronizations

between players at other times of the song, not

always on the beat. It was these that were being

revealed in a subtle manner but increased the

realism and enjoyment of the music.

The screech of the higher notes on a guitar where

more real. Why? I wasn't able to figure it out

completely - to figure out how this was different than

the Silver Badge pair. Perhaps the sound was more

refined and got more of that 'squeakiness' right.

Maybe because the decay was better - these squeaks decay

differently than the main notes. Maybe because the squeak and

primary note were in better balance - that they were more part of

the single act of playing a note, instead of just a set of frequencies

splattered at the listener. I think all these are true to some extent -

but perhaps may not be the primary reason the sound of the

squeaks seemed more real.