![]() |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
"soundhaspriority" wrote in message ... "paul packer" wrote in message ... On 22 Apr 2006 17:34:19 -0700, "Andre Jute" wrote: conferences and their silicon delusions -- "blue-bleak embers" is a touchstone description of that chilling, greyed-out silicon sound. And when they stumble and wound their pride and joy, they gash (gall, As for black and white being only prints, fah chrisesake, this is the twenty-first century: you can say "minstrels" aloud. And, while we're about it, why should blue and whites be limited to Cyanotypes; the cops will have something about that, as will the Delftware subchapter of the Crockery Collectors of the Universe. If you want to throw stones, don't stack them up at convenient overarm distance from your own glasshouse. Welcome to the nuttier fringe of hi-fi. Andre Jute I love Andre's posts---I never understand a word. Translation anyone? :-) There is an expression, "jesuitical reasoning", which is identical to, but preceded the "R.A.O. Debating Trade" by several hundred years: http://www.swrb.com/newslett/actualNLs/relliars.htm Ohhh! I think Granularised sounds much better than Granulated After all they are 'ised rather than 'ated. And as for my name, I am from Birmingham UK. Jem ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ Interesting granularised (granulated, translation for Andre) Cyanotype, or Blue Print http://www.flickr.com/photos/20619005@N00/130957974/ |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
In article ,
paul packer wrote: I love Andre's posts---I never understand a word. Translation anyone? I often wonder where he gets his 'silicon slime' free recordings to enjoy on his tubes. Perhaps he records everything himself on a Revox G36? -- *The man who fell into an upholstery machine is fully recovered* Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
paul packer wrote:
I love Andre's posts---I never understand a word. Translation anyone? :-) It's Andre being brilliantly funny without being malicious, for a change. Though he is mistaken in his interpretation, as Hopkins was obviously criticizing valves. Silicon refers to the glass of the tube; shine, blue-bleak, embers, vermillion, to his problems with heating his cathodes. He would have known of the work of Guthrie and Edison, but transistors were still a pipe-dream. Further proof is found in his 'The Candle Indoors' where he bemoans the short lifespan of valves and has a sly dig at fans of tetrodes: Come you indoors, come home; your fading fire Mend first and vital candle in close heart’s vault: You there are master, do your own desire; What hinders? Are you beam-blind, yet to a fault In a neighbour deft-handed? Are you that liar And, cast by conscience out, spendsavour salt? I think John Donne wrote a poem about the use of a long-tailed pair as a phase-splitter. -- Eiron No good deed ever goes unpunished. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
Andre Jute wrote:
There's no "connection between Jesuits and audiophiles". I don't do generics; it is enough to lave them to the silicon slime. There is a clear connection between a particular Jesuit and the audiophile persausion, as I have disclosed above from parsing his own text. Surely the word is "paraphrasing" not "parsing". Not very well either. Roy. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
Jem Raid wrote:
Alas I don't see the connection between Audiophiles and Jesuits I'm increasingly failing to see the connection between Audiophiles and audio. Roy. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
On Sun, 23 Apr 2006 09:37:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)"
wrote: In article , paul packer wrote: I love Andre's posts---I never understand a word. Translation anyone? I often wonder where he gets his 'silicon slime' free recordings to enjoy on his tubes. Perhaps he records everything himself on a Revox G36? Why would you assume that he is either rational or consistent? Besides, it's a plain fact that there's a lot more silicon in one of his tube amps than in any solid state amp. It's what glass is made from. So, the *real* 'silicon slime' is Jute himself! :-) -- Stewart Pinkerton | Music is Art - Audio is Engineering Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services ---------------------------------------------------------- ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY ** ---------------------------------------------------------- http://www.usenet.com |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
In rec.audio.opinion Andre Jute wrote:
"Andre Jute" wrote in message There's no "connection between Jesuits and audiophiles". I don't do generics; it is enough to lave them to the silicon slime. There is a clear connection between a particular Jesuit and the audiophile persausion, as I have disclosed above from parsing his own text. You're a mental case. ___ -S "Excuse me? What solid proof do you have that I'm insane?" - soundhaspriority |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
Dave Plowman (News) wrote:
I often wonder where he gets his 'silicon slime' free recordings to enjoy on his tubes. Perhaps he records everything himself on a Revox G36? Most any vinyl recorded before 1965 or so is likely "free of silicon". Or geranium. Recording studios and master cutters used tubes before then. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
Stewart Pinkerton wrote:
On Sun, 23 Apr 2006 09:37:00 +0100, "Dave Plowman (News)" wrote: In article , paul packer wrote: I love Andre's posts---I never understand a word. Translation anyone? I often wonder where he gets his 'silicon slime' free recordings to enjoy on his tubes. Perhaps he records everything himself on a Revox G36? Why would you assume that he is either rational or consistent? Besides, it's a plain fact that there's a lot more silicon in one of his tube amps than in any solid state amp. It's what glass is made from. So, the *real* 'silicon slime' is Jute himself! :-) I don't think he's even seen silicon otherwise he'd recognise the "blue-bleak embers" description as that of the colour of silicon and not some metaphor for sound. |
A discriminating audiophile among the Jesuits
In article . net,
robert casey wrote: I often wonder where he gets his 'silicon slime' free recordings to enjoy on his tubes. Perhaps he records everything himself on a Revox G36? Most any vinyl recorded before 1965 or so is likely "free of silicon". Or geranium. Recording studios and master cutters used tubes before then. True. But then with the inherent distortion of vinyl it doesn't much matter. And the 1/4" master will have removed all the transients anyway. -- *Rehab is for quitters. Dave Plowman London SW To e-mail, change noise into sound. |
All times are GMT. The time now is 12:37 PM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
SEO by vBSEO 3.0.0
Copyright ©2004-2006 AudioBanter.co.uk