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I am always perplexed by this discussion. having been to many live concerts & with good sound design, the sweet spot can be the entire concert hall. How come nothing in the home environment can begin to approach this?Mark
I am always perplexed by this discussion. having been to many live concerts & with good sound design, the sweet spot can be the entire concert hall. How come nothing in the home environment can begin to approach this?
Which brings up another discussion as to what is their ideal of what the sound system should be capable of. Is it there to attempt the recreation of a live musical event, or is it tuned more to retrieve and reproduce the best of what the recording has to offer. Personally, I fall into the second category.
I would disagree and say it should be capable of reproducing absolutely everything on the recording, good and bad. That seems to me the only way to capture a well-recorded live event, or a well-recorded anything for that matter. The way you phrase it sounds to me like working some kind of magic on a recording, when the only magic should be in the performance itself, and the ability of the microphone(s) to pick it up. How does a stereo know what the best a recording has to offer is? It should just retrieve everything and play it back.
a stereo image is merely an artifact of recording technique is it not?