What's your go-to song for testing a new system. I've finally committed to a major upgrade to my car audio. What song will let the system shine, and demonstrate whatbits really capable of?
i'd argue that "testing" and "letting it shine" aren't quite the same thing.
to me, "testing" is critically listening to the audio system to determine how well it is performing, how well is it reproducing the playback material, evaluating its fidelity - and making corrections as needed. first criteria for selecting what to play is familiarity: do you know what the music is supposed to sound like? have you heard it a million times on other good sound systems? here are a few "reference albums" that i've read are common among audio engineers when tuning a system:
- Steely Dan: Aja
- Donald Fagen: Nightfly
- Dire Straits: Brothers in Arms
- Boz Scaggs: Lowdown
- RATM: s/t
- Jay Z: Black Album (especially for cars and other subwoofer-heavy setups)
- AC/DC: Back in Black
- Peter Gabriel: So
- The Eagles: Hell Freezes Over
- Leftfield: Leftism
(aside/true story: in 2000, i went to a untz untz untz festival where my friends knew the organizers, so we were let into the venue before the festival started - this allowed us to get killer camping spots. the main sound system was brand new, and after the festival it was going to be used on tour by the rolling stones. the festival was its test run, so some serious audio engineers with cool gadgets were on site. we were woken up one morning by 140 db of.... Joe Cocker. they played some sort of greatest hits album/collection. i had a quick chat with one of the audio guys, and he said they used Cocker because of the dynamics, full spectrum of sound, and familiarity.)
"letting it shine", on the hand, is akin to showing off in my books: make the listeners feel those subs, get blasted by clean sound at high volumes, "bet you've never heard
<insert band name here> sound THIS good!!!", etc. you still want something that was well recorded, but what would be "best" in this case is much more subjective. it's less about critical listening and fidelity, and more about blowing the listener's sock off. for some people that will be metallica, for others it'll be the three tenors...