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Thread: Live vs. Reproduced?

  1. #131
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    Quote Originally Posted by DaveyF View Post
    OTOH, I wander when was the last time that the poster who has this belief attended a symphony?
    Silly me, I guess I just feel in the mood at the moment to take it on ...

    When I first got into the groove of being able to get good sound my disappointment was sometimes when I did go to the real thing, that it didn't have the impact of a recording! This was puzzling at first, but then the thought occurred that when recording a performance the engineers go to a great deal of effort, positioning the mic's for the best pickup of sound that they know how, for the particular venue and group of instruments; far better positioning then just plonking yourself in any old seat at a concert. Thus, a recording should normally be superior to attending the real thing -- I particularly remember a live piano recital on a concert stage where the instrument sound seemed somewhat toy like. Of course, the same piano and player transported into your lounge would come across dramatically different, which is exactly what you get in a decent recording ....

    People here seem to forget that I have said many times that achieving this good sound is not push button easy, I am struggling at the moment to get my current project to behave itself. When it goes off, sounds bad, then it sounds hideous; it is sitting on a knife edge to get it exactly right. Yes, of course, you can just accept compromise, just enjoy the music, etc, etc, but that is not what I'm after. I want to enjoy all music I listen to, and all normal systems just fail to do that ...

    Frank

  2. #132
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phelonious Ponk View Post
    This is gospel to me, brother...
    Embracing the reality that recording and reproduction don't really even get into the neighborhood of the real thing, understanding that there will always be huge compromises involved has set me free. It has allowed me to choose my compromises, embrace my favorite strengths, and be satisfied. Since then, I have spent my time and money discovering new music and great recordings, and it is much more rewarding.
    Tim
    Tim,

    The neighborhood of the real thing is a very subjective notion. The denial option can help help people to focus their attention in the musical aspects. Then they become non-audiophiles. But they do not need to become anti-audiophiles...

    I went through this phase long ago (both non and anti... ) - just a complete Quad system, speakers included, forgot hifi and started buying music magazines, buying several versions of the same work, just to choose the preferred interpretation, buying many recordings, going into "real music details". It was a good time and I valuate it highly - the best part of my recording collection comes from this phase. But after some time, the neighborhood of the real thing called my attention again.

    BTW, Floyd E. Toole also addresses this issue of the neighborhood of the real thing masterly in his book "Sound Reproduction".

  3. #133
    Addicted to Best! Phelonious Ponk's Avatar
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    The neighborhood of the real thing is a very subjective notion. The denial option can help help people to focus their attention in the musical aspects.
    Of course it is a very subjective notion, but it has nothing to do with denial. Once you get to the point that what your searching for is a realistic presentation of instruments and voices, not some romantic notion of a performance event, it's not all that subjective. Real instruments and voices disperse their information radically differently from what loudspeakers do. The change with room acoustics in radically different ways from loudspeakers, and from each other. No loudspeaker has a chance of reproducing both a piano and a trumpet accurately. That is not subjective. The denial, in my view, is in ignoring this fact and convincing yourself that you hear otherwise.

    Anti-audiophile? Hardly. I am a "lover of sound" who has spent many years and many dollars to find what works for me in my listening space. And what I have chosen for the listening space I have now, by the sheer physics, presents greater detail resolution, a deeper view into the recording, than all but a very few high end systems. That, and as natural a tonality as I can get, what I've chosen to pursue. What I've sacrificed is deep bass. Scale? We can argue about that all day as it is largely undefinable, But the scale can be quite large in the only room that matters for my system.

    Tim
    In high-end audio, you can't even fight an opinion with the facts.

  4. #134
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phelonious Ponk View Post
    Of course it is a very subjective notion, but it has nothing to do with denial. Once you get to the point that what your searching for is a realistic presentation of instruments and voices, not some romantic notion of a performance event, it's not all that subjective.
    The romantic notion of a performance event is one the reasons most of us find pleasure listening to music ... If I had never been to a live performance I could skip this aspect in my listening. Butt after seeing performers live I find great pleasure in the aspects that connect the music to the live presentation.

    BTW, why do you consider that no loudspeaker has a chance of reproducing both a piano and a trumpet accurately?

  5. #135
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    Quote Originally Posted by microstrip View Post
    BTW, why do you consider that no loudspeaker has a chance of reproducing both a piano and a trumpet accurately?
    And the same again from me. Methinks Tim has given up well short of a reasonable goal if that is truly his stance ...

    Frank

  6. #136
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    Quote Originally Posted by microstrip View Post

    BTW, why do you consider that no loudspeaker has a chance of reproducing both a piano and a trumpet accurately?
    The answer to your question is in the sentences that preceded my statement. The two instruments radiate sound so differently that it is impossible for a single speaker, with a single radiation pattern (that matches neither of those instruments) to do the job. A really good speaker can emulate the tonality, even come pretty close to the dynamics. A few can get the nuance. None can match the way the instruments would disperse sound in your room and so they will always sound like speakers, not like trumpets and pianos. If you think they do, it is perception, not reality, and you can believe that because you haven't spent enough time in small rooms with real instruments. Enjoy it.

    Tim
    In high-end audio, you can't even fight an opinion with the facts.

  7. #137
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phelonious Ponk View Post
    None can match the way the instruments would disperse sound in your room and so they will always sound like speakers, not like trumpets and pianos.
    So if you were in a soundproof room with a couple of holes cut out the size of large speaker drivers on either side of the end wall of the room, and a real piano and trumpet playing on the other side of the wall, then that would sound like a normal hifi system, it wouldn't sound real?

    Frank

  8. #138
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    Quote Originally Posted by Phelonious Ponk View Post
    The answer to your question is in the sentences that preceded my statement. The two instruments radiate sound so differently that it is impossible for a single speaker, with a single radiation pattern (that matches neither of those instruments) to do the job. A really good speaker can emulate the tonality, even come pretty close to the dynamics. A few can get the nuance. None can match the way the instruments would disperse sound in your room and so they will always sound like speakers, not like trumpets and pianos. If you think they do, it is perception, not reality, and you can believe that because you haven't spent enough time in small rooms with real instruments. Enjoy it.

    Tim

    I do not want to spend a single minute with a piano or a trumpet in a small room. I always listen to them in medium/large rooms or concert halls at a reasonable distance. The speakers should reproduce the sound wave generated by the instruments at some distance, not emulate them. I pretend to have an hifi system at home, not a PA system. In my view, the idea that a perfect speaker should emulate an instrument in any conditions is a misconception - it should recreate a certain sound field at some positions using a recording. The speaker should have some critical directional patterns of radiation versus frequency to be able do do it in adequate rooms. The room is always part of the sound reproduction, the recording engineers and speaker designers rely on it.

    BTW, if you listen to an instrument in one small room, it can sound completely different in another one, as the radiation pattern will be completely different. Or in an open space. But, thanks to perception, one knows how it sounds.

  9. #139
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    Quote Originally Posted by fas42 View Post
    So if you were in a soundproof room with a couple of holes cut out the size of large speaker drivers on either side of the end wall of the room, and a real piano and trumpet playing on the other side of the wall, then that would sound like a normal hifi system, it wouldn't sound real?

    Frank
    Hey Frank,

    What you describe is the difference between how a piano "sounds"....... and how one "sounds" in the space it originally sounded in.

    This is the point, one can hear a piano over a speaker, and say, hey, thats a piano "sound".

    When you can say that that piano sounds just like it did in a real space, then you are not obeying the laws of a two speaker system anymore...there are no natural events in a piano that produce its sound from two point sources spaced 8 to 10 feet apart.

    The illusion can be pretty good but why not just accept that it is an illusion, and accept the shortcomings of the "stereo" illusion. Anyway, most all the work is being done in your brain.

    Additionally, I will say again that I doubt one in a hundred on this forum heard a live, unamplified, jazz event last year...do any even exist anywhere?
    Yes, orchestral works are unamplified, but if anyone here says that their system reproduces orchestral events to live standards then indeed please enlighten us all with your speaker selection! (Frank's razor edge system need not apply!)

    By the way Frank, whats your answer to your question?


    Tom
    Tom
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    It's impossible for stereo two channel mic/speakers to realistically replicate unamplified musical events. The resulting unrealistic reproduction must be accepted or leaves some desiring more. Some endlessly change components pursuing the impossible. With 10 being realistic replication, I generously give stereo a rating of 5 for "getting me there". I rate binaural via headphones 8. I pursue detail/tone over soundstage. Objectivists and Subjectivists debate an ILLUSION!

  10. #140
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    Quote Originally Posted by fas42 View Post
    So if you were in a soundproof room with a couple of holes cut out the size of large speaker drivers on either side of the end wall of the room, and a real piano and trumpet playing on the other side of the wall, then that would sound like a normal hifi system, it wouldn't sound real?

    Frank
    Huh?

    Tim
    In high-end audio, you can't even fight an opinion with the facts.

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