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It follows: With regard to studio-produced recordings, any perception of height or depth and sound from beyond the speakers is an indication of a mismatch between the two stereo channels in terms of phase and frequency response. In other words, the effects of soundstage are the result of distortion....
So then it follows that unless the recording engineer adds a phase effect then results outside of the speaker are distortion effects?
Given: The sound image of a monophonic source, played through a “perfect” monaural system, is a point source superimposed on the loudspeaker.
Given: The sound image of a monophonic source, played through a “perfect” stereo system, is a point source projected between the speakers.
Given: Most studio-produced, stereo recordings are created from multiple monophonic tracks.
It follows: The sound image of a studio-produced, stereo recording, played through a “perfect” stereo system, consists of multiple point sources arrayed between the speakers.
Given: The aural perception of depth and height comes from the correlation of small variations in amplitude, frequency, and phase in the sound heard by the left and right ears.
It follows: With regard to studio-produced recordings, any perception of height or depth and sound from beyond the speakers is an indication of a mismatch between the two stereo channels in terms of phase and frequency response. In other words, the effects of soundstage are the result of distortion.
Kevin,I'm never really understood why audiophiles in general seem to think that microphones are transparent. They're not. They color the sound. With vocals, microphones are often responsible for the excessive sibilance audiophiles complain about and spend so much time and energy tweaking their systems trying to eliminate. All of the major vocalists of the '50s and '60s had a favorite microphone that they used for all of their studio recordings. Some, like Peggy Lee, had a microphone custom made and tune ...