Having no experience with this, it's hard to understand the level of the "slight pops". Again, I have no practical reason for wanting to know. But I *DO* have practical experience with other playback problems with other media types.
What I've learned from prior experience is that, if I know there might be a playback issue, my brain can't stop "waiting for it to happen", which ruins my enjoyment of the experience. It's not a matter of me "listening to the equipment", or being overly critical of the sound quality. It's that my mind knows there are probably defects waiting and that part of my mind is concentrated on hearing them.
Is anyone here familiar with how movie studios used to visually mark movies to try to prevent piracy? For a while, movie studios put dot patterns in first run movies, at the movie theater, in an effort to track down which theaters were leaking movies to illegal sources. So, you'd pay to see a movie, sit down in the theater and watch. Then, at some point, you'd see a very large dot pattern flash on the screen. Sometimes 3 or 4 times in a two hour movie. These flashes only lasted half a second or so. But they were REALLY obvious in many cases. This ruined watching movies in theaters for me for a while. I'd sit there with my subconcious brain waiting to see the flashes of dot patterns destroying the movie.
I think this is a fairly common thing for human beings to experience. We are very, very good at identifying things that happen over and over again. Our brains are keyed to this type of thing. It's part of our very nature.
So, if I know there are going to be pops in my songs, it might ruin listening to those songs for me.
I know this was long. I'm just trying to show how human behavior and expectations play into this particular discussion.
Thanks for reading.
Brian.