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Firstly I don't think you can make a comparison between a concert hall and the home listening environment. A concert hall is so much bigger and many of the problems of reproducing sound in a small room don't occur.The way I would set up speakers and chair now .........
My point with the concert hall, or any venue for that matter, was only that the sound stays stable and doesn't move around with you when you move. I think that is worth striving for in home listening, and is doable.So, is the method you describe how you do it?
I wonder if at a large concert if they are even playing in stereo as you can't really hear where the instruments are coming from.
stvnharr, you're right small rooms (like most recording/mixing/broadcast studios) mean near field listening by default, but setting up in a small room on narrow/versus wide wall is only a trade off of first/back wall reflections (side versus front/back walls) and wide wall setup means back wall bass reinforcement when you sit close by. Have you tried a skewed/non-symetrically angled layout in your smaller room? I tried it in a plaster/wood floor 12 ft x 19 ft room and thought it helped.
Sorry jimtranr if I painted with too wide of brushstrokes on the "typical" room comments, but researchers (including Floyd E. Toole) have shown we are highly accustomed (dare I say "conditioned") to correctly interpret what we hear in most residential spaces. So my point is that obsessive audiophiles IMO are apt to over do treatments (just look through this circle). OTOH many (who don't show up here) believe inch thick open cell foam actually helps.
My room is 25' x 18' with a cathedral ceiling that is 17' at the peak. I have set speakers using Cardas, the rule of thirds, master set, and Jim Smith's Get Better Sound. In the end, I found the best position by using Jim Smith's methods and then fine tuning by listening to some music I know really well. I think all of the various methods will get you close, but nothing beats that final tuning by ear.
Jim Smith, if I recall correctly, doesn't suggest specific positions, just a method to find them.He suggests drawing a grid with speaker and chair positions on it, listening, moving, listening etc. marking the positions on the grid. Essentially something like I posted.His book is full of other practical tips to 'Get Better Sound' and I recommend it.
The ability to "correctly interpret" is at least a tacit assumption underlying MP3, too. This admitted obsessive (my avatar only hints at what lurks along these walls) thinks the question boils down to how much we're willing to "interpret" vs. how much we'd like to be able to actually hear however much we can of what's embedded in a recording, given what we've spent on the gear to get us there. I'd submit that attending to at least the basics of room treatment and speaker placement (to the extent that's possible) in what we might call the "typical" residential room and hearing the results would tend to rein in the temptation to over-invest in gear or binge-upgrade every six or 12 months.
I've not read Jim Smith's book. Briefly, how does what he recommend differ from what Rod did?