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One concern I'm guessing some readers may have is that with minimaly miked live-on-location recordings, all the info- instrumental form and the decay of sound in the venue- is contained in the first wave of sound and that a second wave may be redundant and addtive. Diffusion would better scatter the back wave rather than absorb it and possibly neutralize or obscure somewhat the benefit, it seems to me. A question some readers may have is that if all the info is available in the first wave, what is the benefit of a second wave? Hard to quantify when we're not talking about a specific speaker as some acoustic suspension OB's may have the bass driver enclosed which doesn't make good sense to me theoretically. The benefit as I gauge it is in space and grandeur. But, getting the distance from the rear wall so that you have instrumental cohesion and imagery may drive a person crazy. Is this a possible fly in the ointment? Comments are appreciated.
If you like the OB sound why does it matter if it's fake or not?
OB's mimic how music sounds in a live acoustic space more closely than other speakers do. From a strictly acoustical standpoint, this direct plus reflected sound combination sounds very close to how live music sounds. So, I say again - box speakers replicate the recording more precisely, while OB speakers replicate the sound of live music better. Which do you prefer? Well, that's up to you....
I've mentioned this perhaps three times over the years, each time to zero response, but here goes again, anyway.There is one way to take the guesswork out of determining which speaker set up is most true to the source (at least, spatially) and that is by "calibrating" the mono image. The narrower the mono image, the more accurate and the more you can trust that what you are hearing in stereo is what was intended.If you are comparing two or more sets of speakers and one set produces a more diffuse mono image - i.e., one with lateral smearing - that set will be less accurate, even if it is more fun to listen to because it "widens the soundstage".This is an easy and accurate guide to speaker choice and placement.
A question some readers may have is that if all the info is available in the first wave, what is the benefit of a second wave?
The narrower the mono image, the more accurate and the more you can trust that what you are hearing in stereo is what was intended.
What I have learned, is that ANYTIME you have sound coming from your speakers, and it is "reflected" to you from the rooms surfaces, it is a distortion to accurate reproduction of what was recorded.
That is incorrect. If it were correct, the anechoic chamber would be the ideal listening room.
Interesting. Speakers are tested in anechoic chambers. Why would't this be the ideal listening room? Sound engineers do not anticipate someone / anyone has a given room. Is this not why headphones are so ideal?