| 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.
