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Quote from: doak on 9 Jan 2008, 10:44 pm140 dB??22.5K euro???I know it isn't April 1 yet! well the efficiency of oris swing is 114db and we turned all the 7w from a gainclone amp into it. i didn't measure but it was pretty loud, trust me;)
140 dB??22.5K euro???I know it isn't April 1 yet!
I'm sure the Swings are awesome speakers ,,, though their price would purchase 10 or 11 pair of the Emerald Physics CS2.
Yeah right.. keep dreaming...but I'm a realist...you can certainly create "an impression"..but how close can you get to the "REAL THING"?? 60%, 70%?? That's not close enough to me
Sadly, most orchestra recordings were simply not capable of giving you that "aural impression of the hall" that you want to hear. It's not the fault of the speakers, most of the time it's simply because what you want to hear is not in the recording itself.
I'd say after listening to lot of audiophile systems it is more like 1-5% what we have now with a stereo setup There is a log way to go toward realism.When some brag about his stereo's realism in orchestral reproduction, he surely does need a strong reality check.
Sadly you can not record a proper soundfiled with just 2 channels. What you can get with stereo is a weak "aural impression of the hall" at max, but that is still wery-very-very-very far from the realism.
IMHO, if you want good orchestral sound reproduction you have only 2 options. You either build a huge room with similar acoustics to a concert hall or you use a small and dead room with multichannel (not 5.1) reproduction.
What Daygloworange said.Also, how "real" something sounds is "very very very very" subjective. But the claim that we're only getting "1-5%" is ridiculous. You don't strengthen your case by overstating it.
Quote from: csero on 10 Jan 2008, 02:49 pmI'd say after listening to lot of audiophile systems it is more like 1-5% what we have now with a stereo setup There is a log way to go toward realism.When some brag about his stereo's realism in orchestral reproduction, he surely does need a strong reality check.I'll have to strongly disagree. An exceptionally good 2 channel system in a well treated room, fed with a good recording can sound frighteningly real. As someone with over 20 years as a recording engineer, and over 25 years as a classically trained musician. I have experienced it many times.QuoteSadly you can not record a proper soundfiled with just 2 channels. What you can get with stereo is a weak "aural impression of the hall" at max, but that is still wery-very-very-very far from the realism.Again, I'll strongly disagree. You obviously haven't heard some of the binaural recordings, or soundfield mic recordings in a really good 2 channel set-up.QuoteIMHO, if you want good orchestral sound reproduction you have only 2 options. You either build a huge room with similar acoustics to a concert hall or you use a small and dead room with multichannel (not 5.1) reproduction. Wrong. In a well done classical recording, all the proper ambient room sound is there on the recording. By now playing back such a recording in a "huge room" is just diffusing the sound even more. You will obscure all the imaging and soundstage that's in the recording.If anything, you want to eliminate the effects of the listening room when listening to a 2 channel audio system.Cheers
I asked Brian Cheney this question about a year ago at a gathering - the man makes some great speakers for decades now and is well versed in music. His answer was we're at about 80% of 'real'.
Just for fun take any orchestral recording recorded with any 2 channel method and play it back stereophonically in an acoustically different small room with any kind of acoustical treatment you want. Let's suppose you can transfer somebody to the listening position blindfolded and ask him/her how big is the listening space ( not where the record was made). They can tell 100% certainty if it is a small space compared to the recording venue. From this point on even the 1-5 % is over estimation.
"I asked Brian Cheney this question about a year ago at a gathering - the man makes some great speakers for decades now and is well versed in music. His answer was we're at about 80% of 'real'." No offense to Cheney, but this is an absurd statement. I don't know how you can put a percentage on such a thing, but to think that two, three, or five boxes can in any way approximate a hundred piece symphony orchestra is a flight of fancy. The best you can get is an agreeable illusion of reality, but which in fact is nothing like the real thing.
The path of this percentage discussion is fairly predictable
Hey guys, it's really not that hard to do. I have heard a number of systems, including my own, that can easily create a convincing illusion of being there listening to a symphony orchestra. LS-9's feed with good gear and in a well treated room can acoustically disappear creating a very realistic sound field with pin point placement of everything in its own place. 110db peaks or so can be breezed through like nothing. No strain. No compression. No breakup, and strong output to below 20Hz. See this set up: http://www.audiocircle.com/index.php?topic=43853.0Another great system is using these is Art's. See pics of his custom built versions of the LS-9's: http://www.jamnaudio.com/customls-9.htmlYou can think me biased if you like. I designed those speakers. But unless you have heard them don't knock them. They will do what I claim them to do and please feel free to find out for yourself. Thus far I have heard no other speakers handle reproducing the dynamics of full orchestral music like the LS-9's.
Thus far I have heard no other speakers handle reproducing the dynamics of full orchestral music like the LS-9's.