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#1
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"Constellation electroacoustic architecture"
Hi all,
Do any of you have experience working with, or working in a space equipped with, this system from Meyer Sound? http://www.meyersound.com/products/l...constellation/ Thanks, Jenn |
#2
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"Constellation electroacoustic architecture"
In article ,
Jenn wrote: Hi all, Do any of you have experience working with, or working in a space equipped with, this system from Meyer Sound? http://www.meyersound.com/products/l...constellation/ I have worked not with this system but with the older system designed by Lexicon. And the Lexicon system works better than you'd expect. It doesn't turn a completely dry room into the most wonderful hall ever, but it allows an architect to build a room that is dry to begin with, and add artificial ambience that is controllable. The way I look at it, this is the _only_ way to take one room and make it effective for spoken word, rock concerts, and classical music. But it will not give you as good a room for classical music as a purpose-built hall would. The problem is that in the current era, it's hard to justify the cost of a purpose-built hall that is specifically for classical music, and the guys doing rock concerts (which tend to fill the seats and pay for the hall) can't stand lush reverberant rooms that are great for string quartets. But it's not horrible. I went into one the first time expecting it to be horrible, and it wasn't. I have certainly heard worse halls without any electronic assistance. --scott -- "C'est un Nagra. C'est suisse, et tres, tres precis." |
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