Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK, I'm reading posting after posting, web page after web page,
regarding what's the best equipment for music, what's best for home theater, what's best for surround. Everyone has a different opinion or a favorite brand -- most recommend going to a hifi dealer and trying out different speakers and amps. All I want is to hear music as if the musicians were standing in front of me playing their instruments. I want a recording of a symphony orchestra to sound like I'm seated in the theater. I want a recording of a jazz combo to sound like I'm seated in the front row of the nightclub. I want a Norah Jones CD to sound like she's sitting across the room and singing to me. I want a recording of me playing the trombone to sound like me playing the trombone. I want live music to sound like live music. I know that a lot depends on the recording technique, but let's set that aside for now and assume as perfect a recording as possible. So... is this a lot to ask? Isn't it really the *only* thing to ask? Is sound reproduction that subjective that no one can agree on a particular system that will do this? Or maybe, are we talking about a $100,000 system here to be able to be that accurate? All I want to know is, with my measly $500-$750 (or less?), isn't there a specific receiver/speaker combination that will produce what I want to hear? Or am I just searching in vain at this price point? Maybe I'm just too idealistic and the ability to reproduce live music is too expensive to consider. Thanks, Bryan |
#2
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#3
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Stephen, thank you. I guess you answered my most pressing question
-- is it possible to reproduce live music accurately for $500-$750 -- and the answer seems to be "no." So, that being said, I suppose I am now asking for a specific recommendation. Or is sound reproduction so subjective that anyone's recommendation outside my own experience is irrelevant? Maybe I need to find someone with similar musical tastes (live jazz, classical, acapella vocals, theater) on a similar budget. I guess a good followup question would be -- can you buy sound reproduction components based on specs alone and expect the result to match the specs? I'm thinking that if that's true, then Consumer Reports recommendations are as good as any, and better than a salesman's. Thank you again! Bryan |
#4
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#6
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() |
#7
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you, Dave -- I appreciate your help. I think you're right about
buying speakers "on spec," since so much is dependent on the cabinet design and materials, the driver quality, the crossovers, etc. and of course all of this changes from model to model and year to year. Geez, you'd figure that after over 100 years of sound reproduction, someone would have figured out the "perfect" speaker design by now and there would only be one choice in speakers. :-) I just looked at Cambridge Soundworks web site. They have a Cambridge SoundWorks Ensemble 208 Subwoofer/Satellite Speaker Package for $399. It's in my price range and has decent reviews. Bose has the Acoustimass 3 Series IV for a little less. I already have three BIC Venturi V52 bookshelf speakers that I could use for rear and center channels, so I figure I only need the sub and mains. Hopefully the BICs being as accurate as they are will match the rest of the system. Even BIC America has a three-piece set, but I don't know how good they are. I don't know, it seems so confusing for such a simple goal. ;-) I usually listen to acoustic or vocal music at "natural" sound level - meaning at or maybe a little above the dB level of a live performance. The system will be installed in my home office, which is carpeted and is about a rectagular 19'x23'. So I'm thinking I don't need a lot in the way of power - maybe 50W/channel or so. I'll need to buy a surround receiver/amp, DVD player and the three-piece speaker set. I'd spend the most on the speaker set, maybe even postponing the other components until later to spend as much as needed on good speakers. Well, that's my story. Thank you for your opinions! Bryan |
#8
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
oups.com OK, I'm reading posting after posting, web page after web page, regarding what's the best equipment for music, what's best for home theater, what's best for surround. Everyone has a different opinion or a favorite brand -- most recommend going to a hifi dealer and trying out different speakers and amps. All I want is to hear music as if the musicians were standing in front of me playing their instruments. In general this is mission impossible. There are a number of prerequisites for this experience, and unless you make your own recordings, you don't have them all. I want a recording of a symphony orchestra to sound like I'm seated in the theater. I want a recording of a jazz combo to sound like I'm seated in the front row of the nightclub. I want a Norah Jones CD to sound like she's sitting across the room and singing to me. I want a recording of me playing the trombone to sound like me playing the trombone. I want live music to sound like live music. I know that a lot depends on the recording technique, but let's set that aside for now and assume as perfect a recording as possible. It's not a matter of the perfection of the recording, its a matter of taste and circumstance. So... is this a lot to ask? In specific cases, probably not. In general, its a lot to ask for. Isn't it really the *only* thing to ask? Not everybody thinks that "in-your-face" is where the musicians should be. In many cases, an acoustic perspective of the musicians "in-your-face", spread from left to right and front to back is something that never happened in the real world. IOW, the musicians never all played together in the same room. Even if they did, they may were probably not set out the way you would like them to be. Is sound reproduction that subjective that no one can agree on a particular system that will do this? In many senses, yes. First, we would need some kind of agreement about what should be reproduced. Or maybe, are we talking about a $100,000 system here to be able to be that accurate? I suspect that it might not take that much money to do it well enough, if enough basic parameters could be agreed-upon. All I want to know is, with my measly $500-$750 (or less?), isn't there a specific receiver/speaker combination that will produce what I want to hear? I seriously doubt it. For one thing the original recording would be very important. I don't think there is any extant standard recording format that would in general do what you seem to want. About as close as we might be able to come to what you seem to want, would probably require a new recording format that would include one or more discrete channels for every sound source. For example, there might be 4, 5, or 6 channels for every musician - the sounds the musician makes in the four, five or six ordinal directions. Then there would have to be a device in your stereo that modified the sound in those channels in such a way that each would sound appropriate to your chosen location, given your choices about how the musicians would be arranged in some virtual space. It is possible that there might be as few as one channel per musician or small group of musicians of a kind, and the rest might be synthesized. |
#9
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hehe... Arny, I like you; you're a literal as I am. :-) You're right,
to get every nuance of say, a solo violinist, you would want several microphones picking up all of the hamonics, the player's breathing, the rustle of his/her clothing, the fingers on the fretboard. Of course in a live performace you'd have to be nose-to-nose with the player to hear all that. OK OK, I give... let's get realistic. :-) I don't want "in-your-face" as much as I want "in the audience." I think what I meant to say by "assume as perfect a recording as possible" is just that. Assume that I have found the best recording available of what I want to listen to. This may be a 5.1 Dolby DVD-Audio recording, or a mono vinyl LP (yes, I still have my Dual 502 turntable!). I don't want the sound system to add or subtract anything from what the recording engineers created. How's that? :-) Are there any web sites that have suggestions/recommendations of setups for people who desire to hear a certain kind of sound, hopefully bracketed by budget levels? Thank you MINe for the stereophile.com suggestion. Bryan |
#10
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hey, thank you for that reference to stereophile.com! I found a
reviewer there that I immediately liked. Robert Reina reviews the PSB Image B25 speakers and he listens to and appreciates the same type of music I do -- woohoo! Now this is what I'm looking for in a speaker: "The entire midrange was dead neutral, liquid, and holographic-but when this was combined with an extraordinary level of detail resolution, perfectly articulate transients, and a broad, continuous, organic presentation of the entire dynamic envelope, the overall sonic picture inspired me to strip-mine my music collection for well-recorded acoustic instruments." Cool -- my kind of guy. :-) This makes me want to go out and buy these speakers sight-unseen. I hope he's not a salesman for PSB. hehe If you read the rest of his review, he tests the speakers on mostly jazz piano, vocals and classical. And even some Sade -- nice; my kind of music. I only hope his reference system isn't a $20K setup and that I can use speakers like these with a modest receiver -- maybe in the $200-$400 range. It even sounds like these speakers don't really need a subwoofer for the kind of music I like. Bryan |
#11
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Just a quick link to those of you who are wondering the same things I
am. At stereophile.com, there was a vote taken that answers my question about whether live performance can be reproduced faithfully. The question was: "Have you ever heard an audio system that faithfully reproduced the sound of real, live musicians? What was it?" There are some insightful and informative answers he http://cgi.stereophile.com/cgi-bin/showvote.cgi?393 Enjoy! |
#12
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 08:59:23 -0800, bryan_cass wrote:
OK, I'm reading posting after posting, web page after web page, regarding what's the best equipment for music, what's best for home theater, what's best for surround. Everyone has a different opinion or a favorite brand -- most recommend going to a hifi dealer and trying out different speakers and amps. All I want is to hear music as if the musicians were standing in front of me playing their instruments. I want a recording of a symphony orchestra to sound like I'm seated in the theater. I want a recording of a jazz combo to sound like I'm seated in the front row of the nightclub. I want a Norah Jones CD to sound like she's sitting across the room and singing to me. I want a recording of me playing the trombone to sound like me playing the trombone. I want live music to sound like live music. I know that a lot depends on the recording technique, but let's set that aside for now and assume as perfect a recording as possible. snip May I make a suggestion? Before you start to spend a lot of money on equipment go out and listen to as much *live* music as possible. You can't aim for a target that you can't see. My personal recommendation is to listen to a reasonable valve amp into some sensitive speakers. It may not measure well, and may not produce truly "realistic" sound, but for sheer "exuberance" in music some of these setups take a lot of beating. This isn't just bull... Low power amps into sensitive speakers (especially horns) can give almost frighteningly "immediate" results (I nearly wrote "frighteningly realistic" but that would have been inaccurate given the title of this thread!) - even if there isn't a lot of bass and the top end is ragged! -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#13
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks Mick. I think I have enough listening experience already to
know what I like. I have played trombone and tuba in concert bands for about 12 years now. I have played trombone in orchestra pits for musicals over the past 8 years. I played trombone and sang in a big band from 1995 to 2003. I played piano and sang for our church from 1998 to 2003. I have been in marching bands and orchestras since jr. high school and played piano since I was 9. Not to mention just playing instruments at home as well, and of course attending professional concerts. I'm 43, and I want to finally buy a sound system that I can immerse myself in, rather than making price the driving factor as it has since my first Realistic stereo in 1975. I want to enjoy my hearing while I still can! ;-) Bryan |
#14
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 14 Feb 2005 13:12:25 -0800, bryan_cass wrote:
Thanks Mick. I think I have enough listening experience already to know what I like. I have played trombone and tuba in concert bands for about 12 years now. I have played trombone in orchestra pits for musicals over the past 8 years. I played trombone and sang in a big band from 1995 to 2003. I played piano and sang for our church from 1998 to 2003. I have been in marching bands and orchestras since jr. high school and played piano since I was 9. Not to mention just playing instruments at home as well, and of course attending professional concerts. I'm 43, and I want to finally buy a sound system that I can immerse myself in, rather than making price the driving factor as it has since my first Realistic stereo in 1975. I want to enjoy my hearing while I still can! ;-) Lol! Yep - I can go with that... :-) Thanks for the link (next thread) by the way, there were some interesting responses. I have tried recording my own acoustic guitar playing & playing it back as a test but never really satisfactorily. Ok, my gear is very limited but I don't think we can actually obtain *realism*. We can get *apparent realism* though - sometimes. I'm not sure that you can just nip to the shop and buy a system that does what you want though. Specifications don't tell you how it sounds; the shop has different accoustics to your listening room; you had something different for breakfast. I dunno, there are a thousand reasons why sometimes you get that WOW! feeling and other times it just doesn't work. It certainly isn't just based on price, the number of watts or the THD% though. It seems to work better when you are relaxed, in a comfortable chair and holding a glass of something warming though. :-) If you appreciate brass (dunno why I should think that...) then *please* try to listen to a valve amp as I suggested. I think you'll like it! I think the most startled that I have been by audio gear was when someone switched a radio chat show on in a large shop (many years ago now). The loudspeakers were the Quad "electrostatic radiators". The sheer clarity had me looking round for the speaker for a few moments... I also once heard a demo at a hi-fi show in a hotel. The Linn setup there was terrible and did no justice to the gear at all. What stole the show for me was a system using "The Rock" turntable and some very nice (expensive) valve monoblock amps (I've a feeling that they may have been Krell). The demonstrators had stuck to fairly simple material (wisely IMHO) and the effect was stunning. Unfortunately I have no Idea what the rest of the stuff was now! -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#15
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message
oups.com Hehe... Arny, I like you; you're a literal as I am. :-) You're right, to get every nuance of say, a solo violinist, you would want several microphones picking up all of the hamonics, the player's breathing, the rustle of his/her clothing, the fingers on the fretboard. Actually the several mics would be more likely required to capture the fact that the energy given off by a violin player varies considerably along the ordinal directions. Of course in a live performace you'd have to be nose-to-nose with the player to hear all that. ???? OK OK, I give... let's get realistic. :-) I don't want "in-your-face" as much as I want "in the audience." My point is that what you really want is what you want, when you want it. One time you may want in-your-face and another time you may want in-audience-over-here and then the next time you might want in-the-audience over there. The methodology I outlined might possibly deliver such a thing. It seems to me that little else would. I think what I meant to say by "assume as perfect a recording as possible" is just that. Assume that I have found the best recording available of what I want to listen to. This may be a 5.1 Dolby DVD-Audio recording, or a mono vinyl LP (yes, I still have my Dual 502 turntable!). I don't want the sound system to add or subtract anything from what the recording engineers created. How's that? :-) Without begging the point, what you might want is a system largely composed near-field monitors. Are there any web sites that have suggestions/recommendations of setups for people who desire to hear a certain kind of sound, hopefully bracketed by budget levels? In all of our dreams... Thank you MINe for the stereophile.com suggestion. Stereophile is overtly dedicated to audio's high end, as in the high priced segment of any particular product segment. IOW in the produce segment area of near-field-monitors they have posted reviews of expensive near-field monitors (e.g. Genelec), but not good inexpensive ones (e.g. Behringer). |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... OK, I'm reading posting after posting, web page after web page, regarding what's the best equipment for music, what's best for home theater, what's best for surround. Everyone has a different opinion or a favorite brand -- most recommend going to a hifi dealer and trying out different speakers and amps. All I want is to hear music as if the musicians were standing in front of me playing their instruments. I want a recording of a symphony orchestra to sound like I'm seated in the theater. I want a recording of a jazz combo to sound like I'm seated in the front row of the nightclub. I want a Norah Jones CD to sound like she's sitting across the room and singing to me. I want a recording of me playing the trombone to sound like me playing the trombone. I want live music to sound like live music. I know that a lot depends on the recording technique, but let's set that aside for now and assume as perfect a recording as possible. But that's not the real world. Most recordings are not live ensemble performances. But you want them to sound as if they were. That's fine, that's what I like, too. But it isn't accuracy. **** accuracy. I want to enjoy my listening experience. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#17
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... Hey, thank you for that reference to stereophile.com! I found a reviewer there that I immediately liked. Robert Reina reviews the PSB I was going to suggest PSB to you and now you mentioned it. That is the way I went. Years ago I bought book-shelf PSB's(Alpha series) and they are beyond description. They also came in at a tidy $200 Canadian! Just last month I bought the older model 5T tower Psb's and the matching centre channel. They have brought out their new models with better drivers etc....and as a result, I got what I think is a good speaker pair for $699CDN. Problem is I have yet to use them. Anyways, you can't go wrong with PSB and if you have any questions just phone them up and they take real time to help you out. Good Luck Tec |
#18
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK, I'll bite. What's a valve amp? Sounds like some kind of
water-cooled equipment. :-) I wasn't considering components, if that's what that is, nor tube equipment. I don't think I really want to sink a lot of time, energy and capital into finding the perfect sound system. So I gather from this thread that we really can't reproduce "realism" consistently, so just find something that you're satisfied with. Maybe in 100 more years or so, technology will have advanced far enough to be able to consistently do what I'm asking for. Just tell your holodeck "I want Diana Krall to sing to me" and it happens. I think I'm living in the wrong century. ;-) Anyhow, since this is an opinion group, I'll give my opinion about music reproduction. I think we are so used to heavily processed, and/or badly recorded or played-back music, that we as a culture have almost forgotten what live music sounds like. Live music was the *only* music until about 100 years ago. But we've become so removed from the performance that we're satisfied with the electronic version. Geez, even live concerts are heavily processed though electronics. That's OK I guess... until holodecks are invented anyway. :-) All of this stems just from my own preference to acoustic instruments and vocals. I understand that people like synthesized music -- and after all, music is music no matter what the medium. I suppose I'm just complaining that those who like synthesized music have an easier time than I finding a satisfying sound system. ;-) Bryan |
#19
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I guess by "accuracy" I mean "what the recording engineer intended to
produce." If your sound reproduction system taints what the recording engineer created, then that's not "accurate" in my opinion. Now, we can discuss whether or not it's even *possible* to record a live instrument or voice so that it's exactly reproducible. Geez, is this rec.audio.philosophy? :-) |
#21
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
hehe... no. :-) I take it you don't agree?
|
#22
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm sorry, but I don't know you and your wit eludes me. I figured you
might post your opinion in response. Oh well. |
#23
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
OK, yes I am replying to my own post. :-) But I wanted to give those
of you on a similar quest a nice web site link I found. http://www.stereo-speaker-buyers-guide.com/index.html Some of the text is elementary and tedious, but there's interesting information there and also recommendations for speakers within various price ranges. Enjoy! |
#24
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ups.com... Hi Stephen, thank you. I guess you answered my most pressing question -- is it possible to reproduce live music accurately for $500-$750 -- and the answer seems to be "no." So, that being said, I suppose I am now asking for a specific recommendation. Or is sound reproduction so subjective that anyone's recommendation outside my own experience is irrelevant? Maybe I need to find someone with similar musical tastes (live jazz, classical, acapella vocals, theater) on a similar budget. I guess a good followup question would be -- can you buy sound reproduction components based on specs alone and expect the result to match the specs? I'm thinking that if that's true, then Consumer Reports recommendations are as good as any, and better than a salesman's. Quite true. You will not be able to transport yourself aurally to the recording venue for any amount of money. At least not with the recordings that are currently for sale. The closest you can come is a binaural recording played back through headphones. Such recordings exist--but just barely. You can do a lot worse than following Consumer Reports recommendations. Norm Strong |
#26
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 06:20:08 -0800, Bryan wrote:
OK, I'll bite. What's a valve amp? Sounds like some kind of water-cooled equipment. :-) I wasn't considering components, if that's what that is, nor tube equipment. I don't think I really want to sink a lot of time, grin Ahh... you arn't in the UK are you? lol! Sorry, Bryan, its a "tube" amp. They don't *have* to be super-expensive and esoteric you know! Some of them are actually cheaper than many transistorised (or IC'd...) amps. They are not "clean" amps. They introduce distortion. However, they tend to do this in a manner that sometimes makes the music sound "smooth" and as if it has real dynamics. Some say that this isn't "hi-fi", but it certainly makes for comfortable listening. energy and capital into finding the perfect sound system. So I gather from this thread that we really can't reproduce "realism" consistently, so just find something that you're satisfied with. Maybe in 100 more years or so, technology will have advanced far enough to be able to consistently do what I'm asking for. Just tell your holodeck "I want Diana Krall to sing to me" and it happens. I think I'm living in the wrong century. ;-) erm... maybe... :-) With a suitable system it is *easier* to fool your ears - making it easier to convince yourself that you are listening to reality. You don't really need to obtain realism in order to believe that you are hearing it. The brain is quite willing to fill in the missing info and "correct" what it gets from the ears with enough lies to make it believable... At least for some of the time! Anyhow, since this is an opinion group, I'll give my opinion about music reproduction. I think we are so used to heavily processed, and/or badly recorded or played-back music, that we as a culture have almost forgotten what live music sounds like. Live music was the *only* music until about 100 years ago. But we've become so removed from the performance that we're satisfied with the electronic version. Geez, even live concerts are heavily processed though electronics. That's OK I guess... until holodecks are invented anyway. :-) All of this stems just from my own preference to acoustic instruments and vocals. I understand that people like synthesized music -- and after all, music is music no matter what the medium. I suppose I'm just complaining that those who like synthesized music have an easier time than I finding a satisfying sound system. ;-) It isn't easy finding music with *no* electronics added nowadays, is it? There is usually a PA at least. Don't listen to the stereo system - listen to the music. -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#27
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 06:52:55 -0800, Bryan wrote:
Quality, yes. But accuracy? How do you intend to get it accurate without being able to read the recording engineer's mind? ;-) -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#28
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Not sure I follow. You mean, how do I know what the recorded
performance is supposed to sound like? It should sound like I am present at a live performance, naturally. :-) But since I probably wasn't there during the recording, I can only compare to what I know the instruments should sound like in my own experience. Or, are you saying that it's vanity to use this criteria to evaluate a sound system? |
#29
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I think you are right on the money, Mick. This little discussion has
come full circle. It all comes back to what *I* think sounds like what I want to hear. You, nor the salesman, nor any web site, can tell me what equipment will produce what I want to hear, because you're not me. At least I think you're not me. Maybe you are me but in another dimension. Anyhow, I digress. :-) We're back to me going to a real hifi store and listening to music I know and like in an A-B format. I'm getting more convinced that you shouldn't buy speakers over the internet unless you have done this kind of testing first. And to think I was just going to settle on someone else's opinion of what I like! ;-) Bryan |
#30
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 14:06:13 -0800, Bryan wrote:
Not sure I follow. You mean, how do I know what the recorded performance is supposed to sound like? It should sound like I am present at a live performance, naturally. :-) But since I probably wasn't there during the recording, I can only compare to what I know the instruments should sound like in my own experience. Or, are you saying that it's vanity to use this criteria to evaluate a sound system? No, just that only the recording engineer knew what he was trying to achieve. It wasn't necessarily the sound of a live performance. Phil Spector's "wall of sound" could never be realistic! In a case like that if you produce a "realistic" sound then you have it set up all wrong! :-) I realise that a recording of live instruments should sound right - I was only being awkward for the hell of it... ;-) -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#31
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bryan" wrote in message oups.com... I guess by "accuracy" I mean "what the recording engineer intended to produce." If your sound reproduction system taints what the recording engineer created, then that's not "accurate" in my opinion. Now, we can discuss whether or not it's even *possible* to record a live instrument or voice so that it's exactly reproducible. Geez, is this rec.audio.philosophy? :-) Who are we to know what he intended to produce. We are not mind readers. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#32
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Joseph Oberlander" wrote in message k.net... wrote: OK, I'm reading posting after posting, web page after web page, regarding what's the best equipment for music, what's best for home theater, what's best for surround. Everyone has a different opinion or a favorite brand -- most recommend going to a hifi dealer and trying out different speakers and amps. All I want is to hear music as if the musicians were standing in front of me playing their instruments. I want a recording of a symphony orchestra to sound like I'm seated in the theater. I want a recording of a jazz combo to sound like I'm seated in the front row of the nightclub. I want a Norah Jones CD to sound like she's sitting across the room and singing to me. I want a recording of me playing the trombone to sound like me playing the trombone. I want live music to sound like live music. I know that a lot depends on the recording technique, but let's set that aside for now and assume as perfect a recording as possible. IMO, with modern equipment, 90% of all sound "quality" and "accuracy" comes from the speakers. I suggest that the original poster take a look at planar or electrostatic speakers. All I want to know is, with my measly $500-$750 (or less?), isn't there a specific receiver/speaker combination that will produce what I want to hear? Or am I just searching in vain at this price point? Magnepan makes their MMGs, but they lack bass below 50-60hz and need a subwoofer. Their larger models are superb, though. Almost any modern receiver will power a pair in stereo mode. $550 a pair, though, makes it defiantely in your price range. Surround is a whole other ball of wax and requires at least $4000-$5000 to do correctly.(about $1500 for the receiver, about $1000 for the sub and the rest for 6-7 speakers) Magnepan also makes a surround setup of smaller speakers, but they require two small subs mated with the front speakers as they only go down to 100hz. These sound superb, though, and are only $299 a pair.($2000 total - $900 for a 5.1 setup plus $1100 for two small subs) http://www.magnepan.com/index.php http://cls.audiogon.com/cgi-bin/cls....ull&1111247138 Of course, used, there are great deals to be had. This is essentially a full range speaker. It would knock your socks off and into the neighbor's kitchen. ![]() So, no, you don't have to spend $100,000 to get good sound - for stereo, $2000 will get you 95-98% of the sound quality. Hmmm, that's a new spec to measure, percent of sound quality. That ought to keep you obs yapping fo a few more years. ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#33
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bryan" wrote in message ups.com... Not sure I follow. You mean, how do I know what the recorded performance is supposed to sound like? It should sound like I am present at a live performance, naturally. :-) But since I probably wasn't there during the recording, I can only compare to what I know the instruments should sound like in my own experience. Or, are you saying that it's vanity to use this criteria to evaluate a sound system? Having a sound system present a musical reproduction as you would expect it to or want it to sound is a terrible idea, isn't it? how could you do such a nonsensical thing? ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
#34
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2005 14:14:06 -0800, Bryan wrote:
I think you are right on the money, Mick. This little discussion has come full circle. It all comes back to what *I* think sounds like what I want to hear. You, nor the salesman, nor any web site, can tell me what equipment will produce what I want to hear, because you're not me. At least I think you're not me. Maybe you are me but in another dimension. Anyhow, I digress. :-) hmm.... lol! We're back to me going to a real hifi store and listening to music I know and like in an A-B format. I'm getting more convinced that you shouldn't buy speakers over the internet unless you have done this kind of testing first. Even if you have, its a dodgy thing to do... And to think I was just going to settle on someone else's opinion of what I like! ;-) Get one or two CDs that you really know (and, if possible, like!) and take them with you to a suitable emporium. Get them to set up a decent player and amp (and if they can't do that then go and find somewhere else) then try about 6 pairs of speakers - preferably not piled up in the shop as they don't sound right. Don't be afraid of listening to el cheapo junk boxes. You need to be able to recognise their weaknesses. You should also listen to some that are *way* out of your price range as you need to know what compromises to make. Don't let the dealer set the volume up too loud. You can't concentrate if your ears are hurting! Don't be afraid of leaving empty-handed either. There's no reason to think that your chosen dealer is the right one for you. Remember that an A-B comparison compares the differences between A and B, not between either of them and reality! Aim to choose for maximum enjoyment. If you can find a system where a solo grand piano sounds realistic and a saxaphone sounds right and an acoustic guitar sounds right then you are probably getting there... - but that won't be easy. -- Mick (no M$ software on here... :-) ) Web: http://www.nascom.info Web: http://projectedsound.tk |
#35
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "mick" wrote in message news ![]() : : Thanks Mick. I think I have enough listening experience already to know : what I like. I have played trombone and tuba in concert bands for about : 12 years now. I have played trombone in orchestra pits for musicals over : the past 8 years. I played trombone and sang in a big band from 1995 to : 2003. I played piano and sang for our church from 1998 to 2003. I have : been in marching bands and orchestras since jr. high school and played : piano since I was 9. Not to mention just playing instruments at home as : well, and of course attending professional concerts. I'm 43, and I want : to finally buy a sound system that I can immerse myself in, rather than : making price the driving factor as it has since my first Realistic stereo : in 1975. *I want to enjoy my hearing while I still can! ;-) *Hmm, well, indeed. http://orkestengehoor.nl/achtergrond.../r816_3_ra.pdf is a dutch report from 2003 : brass section players are on average exposed to 88 dbA SPL dayly average over a 260 day working year . K. Kähäri (Linholmen Development, Göteborg) reported in 2003 that only 26 % of classical orchestra performers had no hearing impairements ; within the remaining 74 %: 41 % suffered diminished hearing capabilities 43 % suffered tinnitus 39 % suffered hyperacuses Rudy |
#36
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I can vouch for that. I'm not a professional musician and I only play
maybe once or twice a week. But when I played in a big band in front of the trumpet section, I actually wore earplugs sometimes because it hurt! I do have tinnitus (ringing in the ears), but it doesn't seem to interfere with "normal" hearing ... yet. Ruud Broens wrote: "mick" wrote in message news ![]() : : Thanks Mick. I think I have enough listening experience already to know : what I like. I have played trombone and tuba in concert bands for about : 12 years now. I have played trombone in orchestra pits for musicals over : the past 8 years. I played trombone and sang in a big band from 1995 to : 2003. I played piano and sang for our church from 1998 to 2003. I have : been in marching bands and orchestras since jr. high school and played : piano since I was 9. Not to mention just playing instruments at home as : well, and of course attending professional concerts. I'm 43, and I want : to finally buy a sound system that I can immerse myself in, rather than : making price the driving factor as it has since my first Realistic stereo : in 1975. *I want to enjoy my hearing while I still can! ;-) *Hmm, well, indeed. http://orkestengehoor.nl/achtergrond.../r816_3_ra.pdf is a dutch report from 2003 : brass section players are on average exposed to 88 dbA SPL dayly average over a 260 day working year . K. K=E4h=E4ri (Linholmen Development, G=F6teborg) reported in 2003 that only 26 % of classical orchestra performers had no hearing impairements ; within the remaining 74 %: 41 % suffered diminished hearing capabilities 43 % suffered tinnitus 39 % suffered hyperacuses =20 Rudy |
#37
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I would invite the guy over and we'd drink some ale and he'd listen to
my system and say "Hey, you know that's exactly what I intended to reproduce. Nice job on the equipment selection, my man!" And we'd high-five and part company. Really though, my line of reason is that if one can find a sound system that is able to reproduce the original intent of a recording, then it's pretty darn close to "perfect," no? |
#38
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
You know what would be cool? Have a sound booth with a live musician,
say a pianist, on the same soundstage as the speakers you're testing. Have him play "live", then shut the soundproof door and mike him with a perfect mike and amp and have him play the same thing again through the speakers. I think I'll open a Hifi Emporium! :-) |
#39
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bryan" wrote in message oups.com... I can vouch for that. I'm not a professional musician and I only play maybe once or twice a week. But when I played in a big band in front of the trumpet section, I actually wore earplugs sometimes because it hurt! I do have tinnitus (ringing in the ears), but it doesn't seem to interfere with "normal" hearing ... yet. .......... Some recommendations are to put the trumpet section on a platform, and a little further to the back - this will end up in regulations in the EU. It appears orchestra's acoustical output has been going up by several dB the last 20 years. Rudy |
#40
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
I'm curious to know what you think sound reproduction perfection would
be. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Some Recording Techniques | Pro Audio | |||
Voluntary Collective Licensing of Music File Sharing | Pro Audio | |||
Frontline: "The Way The Music Died" PBS | Pro Audio | |||
Comments regarding: Cables, Hearing, Stuff!! | High End Audio | |||
Sound, Music, Balance | High End Audio |