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That is a really good question. I chat in these forums with members who have hundreds of multichannel SACD's, DVD-A, Blue Ray's, and now immersive audio recordings in auro, atmos, and DTS.I never tried it yet. I stream most music and just use the auromatic upmixer. I prefer live concert recordings over concertvault.com and qello.com and also use Tidal.My Sony UHPH1 can play any type of disc so I suppose I am due to get some of those multichannel recordings.So, the music I listen to has been recorded in stereo so far. It is simple to upmix it, you just select auro 3D on the remote. I have tried the Atmos upmixer for music but it wasn't for me. I have 2 rear speakers hooked up but my marantz processor doesn't engage them for auro. i would need to buy a processor by datasat, trinnov or storm to get auro in more than 10 channels.It doesn't sound like 10 speakers, it just sounds like you are surrounded in a bubble of sound. With 5 or 7 channel I was always aware of the surround speakers, particularly when music emanated from behind you. Auro 3D avoids that. The performers just sound like they are in the front of the room, very natural. There are exceptions like when i play riders on the storm. The thunder in the beginning of the song comes from above you, like real thunder. But for the most part it just envelops you on typical recordings.
Quote from: AJinFLA on 30 Apr 2017, 01:46 pmThe basic premise is true and has been known for decades, as for example, summarized here http://www.aes.org/e-lib/browse.cfm?elib=9136 Here we are 17 years later and what was infeasible in 2000 is feasible now and for a sensible price too!
The basic premise is true and has been known for decades, as for example, summarized here http://www.aes.org/e-lib/browse.cfm?elib=9136
Audio actually used to have a goal: perfect reproduction of the sound of real music performed in a real space. That was found difficult to achieve, and it was abandoned when most music lovers, who almost never heard anything except amplified music anyway, forgot what "the real thing" had sounded like. Today, "good" sound is whatever one likes.
And how does the processor know to put the thunder above? I remember a Sony receiver I had back in the 90s that had these settings such as "concert," "church," "hall," and the like. It was great fun to engage one of those settings once in a while, but it wore off.
Here we are 17 years later and what was infeasible in 2000 is feasible now and for a sensible price too!Actually, it was feasible then http://www.onhifi.com/features/20010615.htmIt's just that kind of reproduction isn't and hasn't been the goal of "high end" and so called audiophiles for decades http://www.stereophile.com/asweseeit/1107awsi/#L87yGDCgzHoIBaxB.97I will definitely be looking into Auro.cheers,AJ
You heard it boys: we can all sell our two-channel systems and buy a Marantz AVR and 9 bookshelf speakers.
Check out the exhibits at upcoming audio shows to see if Ray Kimber is still demonstrating the IsoMike surround-sound. The 2013 RMAF demo featured 4 Sony SSAR-1 loudspeakers ($27,000 pair), Pass Labs X350.5 amplification, EMM Labs equipment connected to a Sonoma—32 super audio center, and Kimber Kabling. The discrete 4 channel recordings were immersive."IsoMike™ (Isolated Microphones) is an experimental acoustic baffle system, to address the interference of intrachannel sounds that results in compromised fidelity. For these 4-channel recordings, the microphones were suspended on four arms, separated by IsoMike™ baffles." IsoMike sells music too, albums are $40http://www.isomike.com/Individual SACD Surround (4-Channel) downloads from their The Fry Street Quartet - Joseph Haydn String Quartets album (2.8MHz DSF) are available for $5 each.http://isomike.downloadsnow.net/
You could hold an open house and let folks come over and decide for themselves.
Don't get me wrong, there is plenty of room for old school vinyl with tube amps and the like. It just confirms how much 2 channels sucks when you need tech from the fifties to try and make it suck less.
And, people are searching like crazy for LPs from the 50s, or they are being re-issued in pricey vinyl or HR downloads. Why, one might ask?Because it sucks?
One has to ask, have you even heard a good 2 channel setup?
Fair question, and yes I think my current Paradigm Active 40 speakers sound amazing in stereo (I have 6 of them as bed channels but can listen to them in stereo when i want). I have used a Sunfire TG3 processor in stereo and my Marantz 7702 in pure direct stereo.just read the beginning of this review if you want.http://www.soundstage.com/revequip/paradigm_active40.htmFolsom I see Industry Participant in your handle, what does that mean? What axe do you have to grind may i ask? Are you subtly trying to promote your 2 channel wares?
Imo, surround proc/ HTreceiver are Loudsy when it comes to 2 channel stereo. (Their design goal is to produce multichannel application. Stereo is just an option or an after though). It is odd that You haven't had any long experience of listen or owning any "true quality" 2 channel set up yet so what is a point of saying 2 channel suck?
????
bothered by my statement that 2 channel sucks
Has anyone other than me noticed that the people who are bothered by my statement that 2 channel sucks have never compared two channel to truly immersive audio?