Yes, remember that people, clothes, rugs, curtains ... absorb sound. So, room ambiance will differ. Even if a 'audiophile' mic is used, it won't conduct sound flat 20-20 or whatever specs it has, due to manufacturing variation. Then, as the devices age, the bose plot could change too. So, the engineer has to tweak, or equalize, the sound at frequencies to compensate for these losses or changes, plus compensate for reflections in the room that can reduce or enhance sound too much. not to mention the analog input stages of the recorders.
So in the end, the 'audiophile' is really just listening to at best, what the engineer has to offer.
Take your CD and look for the credits, particularly the audio engineer. Often stars like Michael Jackson or others, tend to use the same engineer so that all his recordings have the same "sound." Change labels, change engineers, changes sound.
Time/Life reissue of the 'best of the 1990s', fully remastered? It may not sound like the vinyl you remember or the 1st release, again, due to reengineering.
Lastly, as folks age, the ear changes, just like a speaker or a mic and the brain can reinterpret the signals from the sensor, the ear. The 'brain' works like a MPU, or CPU, and does cognitive 'equalization' to 'normalize' the sound. When the brain can't cope anymore, you are now deaf at that spot, regardless of condition or your ear. Have you ever 'concentrated' to hear something? That what that is. We know this because folks with brain injury to the hearing center get unusual equalization or are deaf, that later change or 'recover' as the 'programming' rewires and compensates.
Its another reason why having 'pure amps' without tone controls or equalization is also questionable practice, because the ear has inherent highs and lows, add to it your actual room acoustics can change sound character, and needs to be equalized to compensate, just as you would also do if you take the same music from headphones, quiet room, to a noisy car, or worse a motorcycle!
