Herman Trivilino said:
You could, for example, have a way of measuring the pressure such that you can identify the location of a high pressure region (a wave front) and then somehow measure it's speed relative to you. That is, at least in principle, possible.
Measuring pressure is certainly possible. Even in Newtonian mechanics, pressure is only as simple as a single number when the pressure is the same in all directions (i.e. isotropic). I could say more about how anisotropic pressures wind up being represented, but I think that would drift off from the main point I want to make here.
The main point I want to make is that interpreting the physical pressure measurements as a wave is a matter of interpretation and the reason for being cautious. There is one special case where the interpetation is fairly solid. This is the case when the pressure follows a particular differential equation, called the wave equation,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wave_equation
$$\frac{\partial^2 P}{dt^2} = k^2 \left( \frac{\partial^2 P}{\partial x}^2 + \frac{\partial^2 P}{\partial y^2 + \frac{\partial^2 P}{\partial z}^2$$
Sound waves and light waves in the simplest cases can both be modeled by this wave equation, in the case of light waves the partial differential equations it satisfies are called Maxwell's equations. The solution of Maxwell's equations in a vacuum is that both the electric and magnetic parts of the light wave satisfy the wave equation, just as the sound waves do.
For the simple wave equation above, it's possible to interpret the pressure (or light) as moving like a wave, a wave that keeps its shape. But there are difficulties with the idea when the wave doesn't keep it's shape - the decomposition of the wave into various "moving parts" is not acatually physical, it's an interpretation.
The typical example of where problems can arise is interpreting the phase velocity,
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phase_velocity. Phase velocities can notoriously exceed the speed of light - as can other non-physical entities, like the path of a laser pointer being swept across the moon from Earth.