Nice discussion gents,
I had dinner with the late James Bongiorno at CES many years ago. He was aware of the issues being discussed here and spent quite some time thinking about how to keep a system “purest” and still compensate for these recording differences.
Not an easy task even for an brilliant designer. His unrealized solution was to mount loudspeakers on a robotic sled with programmed positioning for each album in your collection. The sled would adjust loudspeakers toe and listening distance to compensate for this type of perceived balance.
We both laughed and enjoyed the company and the theory discussion that evening knowing it would likely never come to fruition.
Many years later I adopted DSP room correction (Lyngdorf) and placed my speakers close to the back wall. My system like all others is not perfect in room, but adjustable on the fly and the sound on any reasonable recording is everything I could ask for.
There is not one perfect solution for every system and room, but glad to see you guys out there in the bold DSP frontier working on solutions for your systems and rooms. There is no point standing still, acting like the problems in the sound reproduction chain don’t exist.
In this regard, the pro sound guys are way ahead of the average audiophile. Keep the discussion going.