[...]
Then along came the Custom Home Theater frenzy and everything changed. Now we had people in the audio business where it was more important to know how to run cables and install speakers in wall cavities than assess a quality audio setup. Many of them (no fault of their own) had no idea about quality audio or how important it is to a great audio/video presentation so most audio gear was ‘good enough’. Most speakers were there just to fill a hole.
The result of this shift in our business though was that dedicated audio brick and mortar stores started to be left behind and the buying habits of most people shifted. [...]
Mhhh what am I doing replying to such an old posting?
Well, 2 years later I think that we might be assisting to a renewal of interest in stereo equipment, as once the HT novelty factor has faded away, we can see that it rather failed to deliver to its initial promises. Yes, it will definitely enhance your experience in watching the hockey game or the latest horror/action/sci-fi movie, but that's about all of it.
Music is a joke unless you're ready to spend $15000 for the audio part alone (for us Canucks I think the least expensive way of getting there in a HT environment would be Anthem Statement D2 and P5 plus a forest of Paradigm Studio speakers). Add a good TV/projector, a blu-ray source and you're close to $20,000. Oops I forgot the subwoofers. Obviously way beyond most people would like to spend.
So what did we get instead? El-crapo receivers with matching speakers. We debated 5.1 vs. 7.1 or maybe even 11.2. We mentally calculated how many watts per dollar we get and ordered from the internet site with the best deal. How do we do now? Great hockey game thrills, but no music to our ears.
Not to mention the idiocy of the speaker placement in HT setups. Yes sir, we have a smaller center channel that you can place horizontally under the TV so it doesn't sit in your nose. Doesn't matter it's different than the main channels and will sit at different height. "Enhances dialogue clarity", "anchors the voice to the screen" - lame excuses to the fact that the crappy main speakers and receiver weren't able to form a stereo image at all so you needed a center channel.
Then comes the IEEE recommendation for speaker placement for 5.1 music reproduction. Of course it's different than the HT one, and it wants similar speakers on all channels. Time to lug a tower speaker in front of your TV screen so you can listen to "surround music" as it was designed. (LOL @ Kal Rubinson from Stereophile). And move the other speakers around to get the right angles. And recalibrate the room eq. And whatnot.
For what? The industry has failed to deliver any meaningful quantity of records in this format. Oh, Deutsche Gramophon has issued a couple of blu ray discs with outstanding opera recordings. They're really good, let's watch them. But let's move the speakers first as this is in the HT sound format. Bwahahaha what a joke.
How about leaving your HT system "as is" without any further attempt to fix it, and getting a really good stereo setup in a different room?
Sorry guys for the rant.
Nap.
