Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#361
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote
(in article ): On Feb 14, 7:14=A0am, Audio Empire wrote: That's been tried. Analog (ripples) recorders, even very high resolution analog recorders (there was an analog optical recorder in the early eight= ies) suffer from problems that make digital better. For instance, an analog recording is always going to suffer generational losses when copied (a co= py will always be at least 3 dB noisier and have increased distortion over t= he generation from which it is copied). Digital, can, OTOH, theoretically, b= e copied, serially, an infinite number of times with no generation loss. In reality, of course, the added noise with each generation is THERE, it's j= ust that the noise is analog and the system is looking for ones and zeros. No...it's not. A bit perfect recording of a digital recording is relatively trivial. There is no added analog noise with each generation of digital. There is no cumulative analog noise passed from recording to another. BUT, eventually, it is conceivable that the background noise can get so high t= hat the digital intelligence cannot be read through the noise. It may be conceivable but it simply isn't correct. Of course, when that happens, you don't really get an increase in noise in the digital signal, in the digital recording, you get read errors and enough of those will cause the file to not play at all, and that is the practical limit o= f serial copies of a digital file (although, that would indicate a very hig= h number of generations away from the oriiginal recording, and realisticall= y speaking, would never happen. Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. |
#362
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Scott" wrote in message
... snip, irrelevant to what follows Certain elements do the trick. We do have experience with human voices, drum kits, acoustic guitars, painos etc. We can judge the quality of those elements aginst our experience with live music. Heck just listen to the barrage of clocks going off at the begining of the track called Time on Darkside of the Moon. Sounds pretty real. Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. Using the SACD version. And the culprit....the preamp. Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. So much for big-box store electronics. |
#363
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 06:48:29 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Scott" wrote in message I don't agree that the *inherent* colorations of vinyl are so gross that one can easily identify them by ear alone But, you won't take reasonable steps to demonstrate that assertion. and I also disagree that the colorations are so severe that no LP can ever truly sound great. Given the current market penetration of the LP, essentially a moot point. Virtually nobody ever listens to LPs any more. Very few people even have turntables. OK, let's see your facts and figures Arny. What percentage of audio enthusiasts do have turntables in the world and do listen to vinyl? Based on the 40 or so people in my audio club, nobody listens to vinyl any more, even the few people like me who still have a turntable. You see, your constant assertion that "virtually nobody" listens to LPs any more", doesn't seem to Jibe with reality. OK, let's see your facts and figures. What percentage of audio enthusiasts do have turntables in the world and do listen to vinyl? |
#364
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 06:48:45 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message I feel the same way. Like I said, I don't dismiss any source of music (except iTunes store stuff. Everything I've ever downloaded from them sounds execrable). Given that iTunes seems to have a reasonable cross-section of music available, and a delivery system that passes technical scrutiny and works for millions, this seems to be an incredible claim. I can't help that. I listen with MY ears, you listen with yours, and as has been demonstrated here more than once, we don't hear the same things. I hear MP3 artifacts, you seem not to. One difference between you and I is that I would only say that I've heard MP3 artifacts would be based on a DBT. I hear an improvement in high-resolution digital formats, you seem not to. One difference between you and I is that I would only say that I've heard differences based on the use of hi rez formats if based on a DBT. I don't hear many of the "gross distortions" that you say makes it unpleasant for you to listen to vinyl. I think you may hear them, but you might not perceive them. |
#365
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thank you for replies. You are all sound experts in my eyes. Being
without the technical knowledge, my hope is that you can interpret my simplistic conveyance of my opinion. When I walk into the mall and hear music playing, I=92ll focus on it and know if it=92s live =96 sight unseen. As I progress toward the sound (the central atrium), I become more sure of my guess. Then as I peer down to the first floor, I see the band playing with PV house speakers. I=92m hearing amplified (processed) music, but it=92s not as if I were listening to a recording regardless that I had ever heard the band or song(s) before. I never heard Floyd live, but Live=92s unique properties hasn=92t been conveyed by any recording I=92ve heard, to include all the audio test CD=92s & jazz samplers I=92ve collected via magazine subscriptions. Maybe my stereo is the weakest link. Where I live there are numerous sidewalk minstrels of varying talent. It=92s open air and I=92m able to be arms length from musicians playing their instruments, even violinists. I=92ve even recorded myself playing an acoustic guitar. I=92m just saying that we can always get out Live memory reinforced. I understand what you=92re saying about un-amplified music as the truest form of live, but either way, I can=92t think of a time I=92ve been fooled into thinking a recording played back is Live. In the studio, when you can=92t see whether it=92s live or a recording being played back, you can=92t tell? I would love to experience that. I would have to follow that recording through the process (to market) to identify when and where the change occurs. By change I mean when the recording no longer fools me into thinking it=92s live. I=92d have to pitch a fit wherever that transition occurs, intentional or not. That=92s what I=92m trying to ask of you. I know the post-processing plays a big part. I=92m thinking that each pass through another board of electronics impacts the sound thus reducing its =93Liveliness=94 =96 eve= n in the digital domain. There must be specific culprits that can be addressed to help eliminate the recorded sound. Does the industry share the same equipment? Maybe there is bad-actor sound gear that is most influential at squashing realism. Sounds like a light tracking record groove idea has already been made into reality=85 I didn=92t know. Nor did I know that materials other than vinyl have been tried. With all the nano-technology being developed, it seemed a good time to ask the question. Since the audiophile approved CDs do sound better than most, it does stand to reason that the major problems are upstream. It would probably be more beneficial to address those first, or the next medium will continue to suffer. |
#366
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. Classic Records for example if you can believe their PR. as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, Ditto. better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than well made LPs from the 60s and 70s. and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. Not really an advancement of the vinyl LP, but an advancement of the general audio art. |
#367
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Stephen McElroy" wrote in
message In article , Audio Empire wrote: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s as well as things like digital lathe control, better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. And there's nothing wrong with incremental improvements. The proof is in the pudding. LP test records made using the best modern procedures and equipment measure no quieter than classics from the 1960s and 1970s such as those by CBS Laboratories. |
#368
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 14, 5:57=A0pm, ScottW wrote:
On Feb 14, 3:54=3DA0am, Kele wrote: Wow, this is a heck of a subject. =3DA0I have done my own experiment between a Gold CD against a Japanese vinyl pressing of Dark Side of the Moon. =3DA0Does that count? =3DA0I think so. =3DA0I know which my f= avorite rendition is. =3DA0I suppose to explain the difference is similar to explaining the difference between live and recorded music. =3DA0It is difficult to explain, but it's not difficult to tell which is which. Even the best sound reproduction systems I've heard aren=3D3D92t the sa= me a=3D s live. =3DA0My memory of hearing live is all I have. =3DA0And I agree th= at the environment of the live also influences my memory. =3DA0If I compare ea= ch, digital and analog sources, against my memory of live... that answer would be my preferred medium. I've done the blind test (unofficial), but all that's doing is helping prove if there is a difference. =3DA0The difference between analog and digital? =3DA0No, we shouldn=3D3D92t stray away from the true goal, the= sound=3D =A0of Live. =3DA0[I=3D3D92m leaving the environment out of this, ok] =3DA0Thi= s is the=3D =A0part that leaves science behind... =3DA0Which "feels" closest to live? =3DA0= Or, which reminds me most of live. =3DA0That's all. =3DA0I don't know if di= gital discs can potentially sound better than record albums or not. =3DA0So f= ar neither sounds like live - really. =3DA0It's like a ripple sandwiched between two panes of glass, the ripple can't fully expand. =3DA0But whi= ch, analog or digital, is the glass further apart? =3DA0I say lets remove t= he glass! =A0I've heard Pink Floyd live....I actually like the reproductions from my system(s) much much better. Even going all the way back my Original Large Advents. It's not even close. =A0 Live is, IMO, sometimes overrated ![]() When we are talking rock concerts no one I know goes for the great sound. they go to *see* the performers and the show. That never was the sort of "live" music being talked about as a reference or goal in audio. I've seen Pink Floyd live when they did The Wall back in 1980. It was a spectacular show. I still very much enjoy seeing my favorite acts in rock live just to see them. The last one I went to was Rocco DeLuca and Daniel Lanois with his band Black Dub. It was a sensational show. |
#369
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 17:57:38 -0800, ScottW wrote
(in article ): On Feb 14, 3:54=A0am, Kele wrote: Wow, this is a heck of a subject. =A0I have done my own experiment between a Gold CD against a Japanese vinyl pressing of Dark Side of the Moon. =A0Does that count? =A0I think so. =A0I know which my favorite rendition is. =A0I suppose to explain the difference is similar to explaining the difference between live and recorded music. =A0It is difficult to explain, but it's not difficult to tell which is which. Even the best sound reproduction systems I've heard aren=3D92t the same a= s live. =A0My memory of hearing live is all I have. =A0And I agree that the environment of the live also influences my memory. =A0If I compare each, digital and analog sources, against my memory of live... that answer would be my preferred medium. I've done the blind test (unofficial), but all that's doing is helping prove if there is a difference. =A0The difference between analog and digital? =A0No, we shouldn=3D92t stray away from the true goal, the sound= of Live. =A0[I=3D92m leaving the environment out of this, ok] =A0This is the= part that leaves science behind... =A0Which "feels" closest to live? =A0Or, which reminds me most of live. =A0That's all. =A0I don't know if digital discs can potentially sound better than record albums or not. =A0So far neither sounds like live - really. =A0It's like a ripple sandwiched between two panes of glass, the ripple can't fully expand. =A0But which, analog or digital, is the glass further apart? =A0I say lets remove the glass! I've heard Pink Floyd live....I actually like the reproductions from my system(s) much much better. Even going all the way back my Original Large Advents. It's not even close. Live is, IMO, sometimes overrated ![]() ScottW I'm sorry, I cannot get past the notion that listening to a musical group through loudspeakers (even any acoustical ones) is hearing that group "live". To me the only differences between hearing a PA system of a rock group and listening to a recording of that group on one's own stereo system is the quality of the loudspeakers and the fact that the concert is a "shared" experience. |
#370
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
"Scott" wrote in message ... snip, irrelevant to what follows Certain elements do the trick. We do have experience with human voices, drum kits, acoustic guitars, painos etc. We can judge the quality of those elements aginst our experience with live music. Heck just listen to the barrage of clocks going off at the begining of the track called Time on Darkside of the Moon. Sounds pretty real. Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. Using the SACD version. And the culprit....the preamp. Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and listen to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the high end audiophile comments on this thread. |
#371
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:31:05 -0800, Scott wrote
(in article ): On Feb 14, 5:57=A0pm, ScottW wrote: On Feb 14, 3:54=3DA0am, Kele wrote: Wow, this is a heck of a subject. =3DA0I have done my own experiment between a Gold CD against a Japanese vinyl pressing of Dark Side of the Moon. =3DA0Does that count? =3DA0I think so. =3DA0I know which my f= avorite rendition is. =3DA0I suppose to explain the difference is similar to explaining the difference between live and recorded music. =3DA0It is difficult to explain, but it's not difficult to tell which is which. Even the best sound reproduction systems I've heard aren=3D3D92t the sa= me a=3D s live. =3DA0My memory of hearing live is all I have. =3DA0And I agree th= at the environment of the live also influences my memory. =3DA0If I compare ea= ch, digital and analog sources, against my memory of live... that answer would be my preferred medium. I've done the blind test (unofficial), but all that's doing is helping prove if there is a difference. =3DA0The difference between analog and digital? =3DA0No, we shouldn=3D3D92t stray away from the true goal, the= sound=3D =A0of Live. =3DA0[I=3D3D92m leaving the environment out of this, ok] =3DA0Thi= s is the=3D =A0part that leaves science behind... =3DA0Which "feels" closest to live? =3DA0= Or, which reminds me most of live. =3DA0That's all. =3DA0I don't know if di= gital discs can potentially sound better than record albums or not. =3DA0So f= ar neither sounds like live - really. =3DA0It's like a ripple sandwiched between two panes of glass, the ripple can't fully expand. =3DA0But whi= ch, analog or digital, is the glass further apart? =3DA0I say lets remove t= he glass! =A0I've heard Pink Floyd live....I actually like the reproductions from my system(s) much much better. Even going all the way back my Original Large Advents. It's not even close. =A0 Live is, IMO, sometimes overrated ![]() When we are talking rock concerts no one I know goes for the great sound. they go to *see* the performers and the show. That never was the sort of "live" music being talked about as a reference or goal in audio. I've seen Pink Floyd live when they did The Wall back in 1980. It was a spectacular show. I still very much enjoy seeing my favorite acts in rock live just to see them. The last one I went to was Rocco DeLuca and Daniel Lanois with his band Black Dub. It was a sensational show. I guess I can understand that. At least you don't pretend to be hearing "live music". |
#372
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:31:34 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Harry Lavo" wrote in message "Scott" wrote in message ... snip, irrelevant to what follows Certain elements do the trick. We do have experience with human voices, drum kits, acoustic guitars, painos etc. We can judge the quality of those elements aginst our experience with live music. Heck just listen to the barrage of clocks going off at the begining of the track called Time on Darkside of the Moon. Sounds pretty real. Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. Using the SACD version. And the culprit....the preamp. Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and listen to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the high end audiophile comments on this thread. Well, close miking is one of those "horses for courses" questions. In some music it works, in some it doesn't. For rock, I would suspect that it's de riguer. For small, intimate jazz ensembles, it also works. For classical string quartets and symphony orchestras, solo acoustic guitar, solo piano, etc. it does not work and anybody who uses it in situations where it does not work is incompetent (and there is a lot of that around. If I had a dollar for every solo guitar recording I've heard where the guitar is 7 feet wide, I be a richer man now). For some music you mike the musicians, for other music you mike the space the musicians occupy. The skill is in knowing which technique to use in which instance. Anybody who thinks that a dozen violins, each close-miked and mixed together in a mixer, sounds ANYTHING like a real string section is crazy. String sound in an orchestra is designed to mix in the air, naturally, you can't do it electronically and if you try, you will fail and what you will get is 12 separate violins. Also, close miking robs any recording of any semblance of a natural soundstage. Grossly multi-miked/multi-channel orchestral recordings (such as those done in the 1970s) where each instrument is pan-potted into place, sounds like the orchestra is lined-up across the stage in a straight line. Such a recording has no depth and no height to the image and doesn't even sound like an orchestra. There is a story told about British composer Ralph Vaughn-Williams. Decca had just recorded one of his 9 symphonies (I forget which) and he was listening to the playback. Suddenly he jumps out of his seat and yells "Stop the playback!" "What's wrong" asks the record's producer. "I hear the tuba." replies the great man. "Oh, is that all. Yes, it comes through nicely. We gave your tuba it's own microphone because it wasn't coming through on the recording ." "That's nice." Retorts Vaughn-Williams. "The tuba part is there so that the horns can hear the bass line while they play. It plays softly because It's NOT SUPPOSED to be heard by the audience!" So much for multi-miking. |
#373
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 15, 5:31=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Harry Lavo" wrote in message "Scott" wrote in message ... snip, irrelevant to what follows Certain elements do the trick. We do have experience with human voices, drum kits, acoustic guitars, painos etc. We can judge the quality of those elements aginst our experience with live music. Heck just listen to the barrage of clocks going off at the begining of the track called Time on Darkside of the Moon. Sounds pretty real. Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. =A0Using the SACD version. =A0And the culprit....the preamp. =A0 Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. =A0So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and list= en to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the hi= gh end audiophile comments on this thread.- Hide quoted text - Do you have any pictures or first hand accounts of the mic positions for the recording of the clocks on DSOTM? Close micing does bode poorly if one has any interest in ambient sound and reverb. Something that is critical for classical and other acoustic music. |
#374
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:30:55 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Stephen McElroy" wrote in message In article , Audio Empire wrote: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s as well as things like digital lathe control, better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. And there's nothing wrong with incremental improvements. The proof is in the pudding. LP test records made using the best modern procedures and equipment measure no quieter than classics from the 1960s and 1970s such as those by CBS Laboratories. Yet by your own admission you sat that you've never heard any of these modern re-masterings from companies such as Classics Records. So how would you know what improvements have been wrought? |
#375
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 15, 5:30=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. =A0There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Since when is 'general accpetance" any sort of test of the state of the art? May as well say CD having a wider dynamic range fails the test of "general acceptance" due to the general use of compression. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. =A0Classic Records for ex= ample if you can believe their PR. I think what you mean is there are still people cutting with laquer. And it is true that a lot of cutting engineers think laquer is still the superior medium for cutting records. =A0as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. =A0Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. Forget the failed llogic of this "general acceptance" argument and name one cutting engineer doing this manually these days. I'm not even going to limit this hoice to top flight cutting engineers. none of them are doing this manually. Just name one anywhere these days. better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. How so? My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than w= ell made LPs from the 60s and 70s. But you are using fatally flawed equipment. and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. Not really an advancement of the vinyl LP, but an advancement of the gene= ral audio art. No it would be an advancement in LP production because it would lead to better sounding LPs. Period. |
#376
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:30:47 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. Classic Records for example if you can believe their PR. Many current releases are DMM mastered and many aren't. Those that are benefit from it with quieter surfaces. Also records are premium products these days with some titles costing as much as $60. They all use super-high-grade virgin vinyl which was generally not used in vinyl's heyday - especially for non-classical releases. Even where virgin vinyl was used, it wasn't of the quality used today. as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. And many don't. There is no "test of general acceptance". And even if there were, I doubt that you have a poll of all the mastering engineers in the business today to be able to tell us what the "general acceptance" actually is. IOW, you are basing these conclusions on your own prejudices. better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, Ditto. Ditto to you as well. better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. To who? You? Given your prejudicial attitude toward vinyl, I don't doubt that everything associated with LPs is of "questionable value" to you. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than well made LPs from the 60s and 70s. Your measurements? Where would you find a large enough cross section of un-played pressings from the 60s and 70's with which to make such a comparison? and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. Not really an advancement of the vinyl LP, but an advancement of the general audio art. It would still provide a better sounding LP |
#377
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:29:07 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 06:48:45 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message I feel the same way. Like I said, I don't dismiss any source of music (except iTunes store stuff. Everything I've ever downloaded from them sounds execrable). Given that iTunes seems to have a reasonable cross-section of music available, and a delivery system that passes technical scrutiny and works for millions, this seems to be an incredible claim. I can't help that. I listen with MY ears, you listen with yours, and as has been demonstrated here more than once, we don't hear the same things. I hear MP3 artifacts, you seem not to. One difference between you and I is that I would only say that I've heard MP3 artifacts would be based on a DBT. But I have heard them in a DBT. I hear an improvement in high-resolution digital formats, you seem not to. One difference between you and I is that I would only say that I've heard differences based on the use of hi rez formats if based on a DBT. But I have heard them in a DBT. However, It's only 24 bit vs 16 bit that seems to make any significant audio difference. The difference between 24/88.2, 24/96 and 24/176.4, or 24/192 is statistically blind chance. I don't hear many of the "gross distortions" that you say makes it unpleasant for you to listen to vinyl. I think you may hear them, but you might not perceive them. They certainly don't get in the way of my enjoyment of records when there is enjoyment there to be heard, if that's what you mean. |
#378
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:28:52 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 06:48:29 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Scott" wrote in message I don't agree that the *inherent* colorations of vinyl are so gross that one can easily identify them by ear alone But, you won't take reasonable steps to demonstrate that assertion. and I also disagree that the colorations are so severe that no LP can ever truly sound great. Given the current market penetration of the LP, essentially a moot point. Virtually nobody ever listens to LPs any more. Very few people even have turntables. OK, let's see your facts and figures Arny. What percentage of audio enthusiasts do have turntables in the world and do listen to vinyl? Based on the 40 or so people in my audio club, nobody listens to vinyl any more, even the few people like me who still have a turntable. You see, your constant assertion that "virtually nobody" listens to LPs any more", doesn't seem to Jibe with reality. OK, let's see your facts and figures. What percentage of audio enthusiasts do have turntables in the world and do listen to vinyl? You are the one that asserts that nobody listens to vinyl any more. My assertion is based on the large number of record decks, arms, cartridges and phono preamps available in the marketplace today and the fact that new ones are coming out all the time. If nobody listens to vinyl any more, there would be no market for these devices, yet there obviously is. People can't stay in business if nobody is buying their products. That's basic business economics. However I did talk to Sumiko (who imports Pro-Ject tables and several cartridge lines) this AM, and their marketing guy told me that Sumiko sold almost a half a million turntable units in the USA and Canada alone in 2010. Worldwide, he said that estimates are that vinyl is a 1.2 billion dollar business. A niche, yes, but a big enough pie that many companies can get a healthy slice of it. And it means that the number of people who listen to vinyl is hardly "nobody" and that those "nobodies" are (currently, anyway) growing in number. |
#379
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
You are the one that asserts that nobody listens to vinyl any more. My assertion is based on the large number of record decks, arms, cartridges and phono preamps available in the marketplace today and the fact that new ones are coming out all the time. Availability does not necessarily equal sales. Without actual sales figures your assertions have no meaning. Product announcements may be for products that are vapor. If nobody listens to vinyl any more, there would be no market for these devices, yet there obviously is. The market size is at this time unknown for the reasons stated above. People can't stay in business if nobody is buying their products. That's basic business economics. Furthermore, were you to provide actual sales figures, we'd have to divide that by another unknown, the size of the total audiophile market. However I did talk to Sumiko (who imports Pro-Ject tables and several cartridge lines) this AM, and their marketing guy told me that Sumiko sold almost a half a million turntable units in the USA and Canada alone in 2010. Worldwide, he said that estimates are that vinyl is a 1.2 billion dollar business. A salesman bragging does not make a reliable statistics. According to CEDIA total 2010 home audio component sales were $3.78 billion. Vinyl = 1/3 of all home audio component sales? I don't think so. http://www.twice.com/article/463519-...rnaround.ph p A niche, yes, but a big enough pie that many companies can get a healthy slice of it. And it means that the number of people who listen to vinyl is hardly "nobody" and that those "nobodies" are (currently, anyway) growing in number. No reliable evidence about vinyl to be seen here yet, I fear. |
#380
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |
#381
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2/15/2011 6:31 AM, Audio Empire wrote:
On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 17:57:38 -0800, ScottW wrote (in ): I've heard Pink Floyd live....I actually like the reproductions from my system(s) much much better. Even going all the way back my Original Large Advents. It's not even close. Live is, IMO, sometimes overrated ![]() ScottW I'm sorry, I cannot get past the notion that listening to a musical group through loudspeakers (even any acoustical ones) is hearing that group "live". To me the only differences between hearing a PA system of a rock group and listening to a recording of that group on one's own stereo system is the quality of the loudspeakers and the fact that the concert is a "shared" experience. Well, there's more overlap than you seem to think, or you have a very narrow definition of rock/pop. I don't believe any of the orchestras accompanying groups such as Procol Harum or Renaissance, in their orchestral shows, being amplified. And the "unplugged" MTV performance of 10,000 Maniacs was IMO clearly their best work. The "Rule", no, but there's a lot of hybrid stuff out there where maybe only vocals are amplified (new age stuff like Nightnoise, Loreena McKennitt, for e.g., or folk for example), where the "pure" acoustic performances involved are live by any reasonable definition. Perhaps you should change your description to "acoustic" music. Because it's hard to dispute that musicians playing instruments right there in front of you is not "live". But, clearly there's a broad gray line between what constitutes a 'concert' versus a 'performance event' where the music merely accompanies the visual spectacle. Usually, when the folks on stage are dressed in Halloween costumes, it's the latter :-) 'Course, that's just my opinion. Keith |
#382
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 17:03:52 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message You are the one that asserts that nobody listens to vinyl any more. My assertion is based on the large number of record decks, arms, cartridges and phono preamps available in the marketplace today and the fact that new ones are coming out all the time. Availability does not necessarily equal sales. Without actual sales figures your assertions have no meaning. Product announcements may be for products that are vapor. If nobody listens to vinyl any more, there would be no market for these devices, yet there obviously is. The market size is at this time unknown for the reasons stated above. People can't stay in business if nobody is buying their products. That's basic business economics. Furthermore, were you to provide actual sales figures, we'd have to divide that by another unknown, the size of the total audiophile market. However I did talk to Sumiko (who imports Pro-Ject tables and several cartridge lines) this AM, and their marketing guy told me that Sumiko sold almost a half a million turntable units in the USA and Canada alone in 2010. Worldwide, he said that estimates are that vinyl is a 1.2 billion dollar business. A salesman bragging does not make a reliable statistics. According to CEDIA total 2010 home audio component sales were $3.78 billion. Vinyl = 1/3 of all home audio component sales? I don't think so. http://www.twice.com/article/463519- CEA_Component_Audio_Leads_Home_Audio_Turna round.php A niche, yes, but a big enough pie that many companies can get a healthy slice of it. And it means that the number of people who listen to vinyl is hardly "nobody" and that those "nobodies" are (currently, anyway) growing in number. No reliable evidence about vinyl to be seen here yet, I fear. And as I figured, You would not accept any proof of any kind because it goes against the your preconceived notion about the truth. The fact that these components exists in the marketplace would be enough proof for any reasonable person that the market is healthy (for the economic reasons that I have already mentioned), but it doesn't fit with your agenda, so therefore you dismiss it. It seems that you will dismiss any evidence that shows you wrong. Fine. I know when I'm up against a brick wall, and you are that wall. Just as long as the other people who post here understand that your opinions on this subject are extremely suspect and lack credibility, then it's job done. |
#383
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Scott" wrote in message
On Feb 15, 5:31=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Harry Lavo" wrote in message Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. =A0Using the SACD version. =A0And the culprit....the preamp. =A0 Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. =A0So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and list= en to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the hi= gh end audiophile comments on this thread.- Hide quoted text - Do you have any pictures or first hand accounts of the mic positions for the recording of the clocks on DSOTM? No experienced recording engineer would need such a thing to reach the conclusion that I've provided. If you've miced different instruments in different rooms different ways, a recording paints a fairly detailed sonic picture of how the recording was miced. If you've worked the room, then mic locations can be estimated fairly well. What is known for sure is that DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead. It is common to mic close and add the sonic perspective electronically during the mix. Done right, this can fool most listeners. Scientifically speaking, the impulse response from a source location to a given lisetening location in the room can be now calculated well enough from architectural plans so that the sonic qualities of a proposed room can be auditioned fairly sucessfully before it is built. http://www.amazon.com/Auralization-F.../dp/3540488294 http://ambpnetwork.wordpress.com/int...logical-sites/ http://www.springerlink.com/content/jn0u168k518136q2/ Close micing does bode poorly if one has any interest in ambient sound and reverb. Something that is critical for classical and other acoustic music. One of the well-known principles of micing live events is that you have put the mics far closer to the instruments, than a listener would be for the desired sonic perspective. For my band and choir festival recordings, the music directors have told me that they want a sonic perspective that is similar to that where the judges sit. They typically sit about 12-16 rows back. I generally put my conincident pair near the lip of the stage, IOW in front of row 1. |
#384
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:30:55 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Stephen McElroy" wrote in message In article , Audio Empire wrote: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s as well as things like digital lathe control, better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) and generally less 'colored' electronics all through the system. And there's nothing wrong with incremental improvements. The proof is in the pudding. LP test records made using the best modern procedures and equipment measure no quieter than classics from the 1960s and 1970s such as those by CBS Laboratories. Yet by your own admission you sat that you've never heard any of these modern re-masterings from companies such as Classics Records. I have admitted no such thing. I've heard modern re-masterings. Nothing wrong with them, given the obvious limitations of the medium(s) that they are based on. So how would you know what improvements have been wrought? The comparisons that I mentioned above are based on SOTA legacy recordings and modern recordings that are alleged to be made to the highest modern standards. That they are test records and therefore easier to evaluate technically does not limit their performance in any way. If you think about it, the very reason for existence of a test record demands that it be made to the highest contemporary standards. While a test record from a general-interest magazine such as Popular Science might be a little suspect, those made by CBS Labs or in modern times Hi Fi News, should be beyond reproach. I've got a good selection of them including duplicates in some cases. |
#385
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Scott" wrote in message
On Feb 15, 5:30=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. =A0There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Since when is 'general acceptance" any sort of test of the state of the art? If you want to quibble with my choice of words, then enjoy! Experience shows that the general acceptance or non-acceptance of an alleged technology after decades of experience is the world's most relevant evaluation of that technology. May as well say CD having a wider dynamic range fails the test of "general acceptance" due to the general use of compression. You're conflating mastering for sitautions where dynamic range is detrimental to listening enjoyment in say mobile or other noisy environments, with the limiations of a medium. We've discussed this to death, so I won't be distracted by this essentially OT comment. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. =A0Classic Records for ex= ample if you can believe their PR. I think what you mean is there are still people cutting with laquer. And it is true that a lot of cutting engineers think laquer is still the superior medium for cutting records. Hence my statement that DMM which is cutting metal and not laquer, has failed the test of general acceptance. Wikipeida says that DMM was introduced in 1974, so the technology is now over 35 years old. The "decades of experience" criteria has been met. =A0as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. =A0Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. Forget the failed llogic of this "general acceptance" argument and name one cutting engineer doing this manually these days. I'm not even going to limit this hoice to top flight cutting engineers. none of them are doing this manually. Just name one anywhere these days. http://www.co-bw.com/Recording_Mastering_Vinyl.htm "FIG. 1: The Neumann AM-32 lathe at Infrasonic Sound. The large dial on the control panel at the right can be used to manually regulate the number of lines etched into the master lacquer." So what are you telling me Scott? That a robot puts its mechanical hand on that large dial and thus the cutting process is entirely computer controlled? ;-) better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. How so? I underscored this point shortly in the post you are responding to. The proof of any alleged technical advance is better performance in the end product, as delivered, or lowered cost, or better consistency, etc. Where is reliable evidence of improved performance from modern LPs as compared to SOTA products from the golden age of the LP which was about 40 years ago? If carefully-crafted products like the modern HFN test record are matched by SOTA product from CBS labs in the 60s and 70s, then we have solid evidence that no actual technical advances improving final quality have been made. We have further proof in the absence of refereed technical papers about verifiable technical advances from the last several decades. LP cutting and production has "stabilized technology" written all over it. For example, I found references to the use of the Neumann AM-32 cutting lathe by modern LP mastering experts such as the one proudly mentioned above, for the production of a recording that was released in 1983. That was 28 years ago. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than w= ell made LPs from the 60s and 70s. But you are using fatally flawed equipment. You have thus far shown zero reliable evidence to back that up, Scott. You're just being unecessarily insulting. :-( But fine. Nothing I did can't be duplicated by a dedicated vinylphile such as yourself, Scott. Please provide needle drops from the relevant recordings that support your claims. If Michael Fremer can provide me with needle drops, why can't you? I obtained my CBS Labs test records from eBay. I'm sure that your resources for finding legacy recordings exceed mine. |
#386
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:30:47 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. Classic Records for example if you can believe their PR. Many current releases are DMM mastered and many aren't. Those that are benefit from it with quieter surfaces. Also records are premium products these days with some titles costing as much as $60. So what? Much of the cost of items such as LPs come from production volumes. They all use super-high-grade virgin vinyl which was generally not used in vinyl's heyday - especially for non-classical releases. So what? That's not a technological advance, its just quality control. Even where virgin vinyl was used, it wasn't of the quality used today. Prove that with information from a reliable source. PVC has been around since before WW2 and was a stable technology, even in the 60s and 70s. as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. And many don't. You've made my point. Thank you. There is no "test of general acceptance". You're denying the way that we all know that the world works. And even if there were, I doubt that you have a poll of all the mastering engineers in the business today to be able to tell us what the "general acceptance" actually is. IOW, you are basing these conclusions on your own prejudices. The advantage of automated cutting would be reduction of operator skill and more reliable results. Even in the 60s mastering engineers could manually preview an entire recording before hand and work out a script of adjustments that would equal what a computer could do because it was based on human wisdom and perfect foreknowlege. better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, Ditto. Ditto to you as well. IKWYABWAI. better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. To who? You? Given your prejudicial attitude toward vinyl, I don't doubt that everything associated with LPs is of "questionable value" to you. Show me the beef, which in this case is superior technical performance. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than well made LPs from the 60s and 70s. Your measurements? Where would you find a large enough cross section of un-played pressings from the 60s and 70's with which to make such a comparison? I bought a goodly number of test records off of eBay a few years back. Some were obviously virgin or close to it. They were amazingly plentiful and economical to obtain. I don't need a cross-section to make my point. All I needed to find was a few very good ones. I'm not commenting on the general run of LPs, but the respective SOTA, then and now. |
#387
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Audio Empire" wrote in message
And as I figured, You would not accept any proof of any kind because it goes against the your preconceived notion about the truth. We're not talking about "any proof" we're talking about no proof from you. Letsee, I provide a well-documente quote from a widely respected industry source, and you provide an anecdote from an unnamed sales rep. Is that really the best that you can do? |
#388
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 16, 5:36=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Scott" wrote in message On Feb 15, 5:30=3DA0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. =3DA0There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Since when is 'general acceptance" any sort of test of the state of the art? If you want to quibble with my choice of words, then enjoy! It's not the words arny it's the very idea behind them that is absurd. Experience shows that the general acceptance or non-acceptance of an alle= ged technology after decades of experience is the world's most relevant evaluation of that technology. Experience shows no such thing. Quite the opposite. History shows that state of the art often is a lonesome place where others often never follow for many reasons. By your logic things like the heat shields on the space shuttle are not state of the art because they are not widely used. May as well say CD having a wider dynamic range fails the test of "general acceptance" due to the general use of compression. You're conflating mastering for sitautions where dynamic range is detrimental to listening enjoyment in say mobile or other noisy environments, with the limiations of a medium. =A0We've discussed this to death, so I won't be distracted by this essentially OT comment. I'm not conflating anything just showing how your argument fails when applied to other things. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. =3DA0Classic Records for ex=3D ample if you can believe their PR. I think what you mean is there are still people cutting with laquer. And it is true that a lot of cutting engineers think laquer is still the superior medium for cutting records. Hence my statement that DMM which is cutting metal and not laquer, has failed the test of general acceptance. =A0Wikipeida says that DMM was introduced in 1974, so the technology is now over 35 years old. =A0The "decades of experience" criteria has been met. It is a weak argument borne out of a lack of information. If one wants to learn more on the subject they would be better served by talking to mastering engineers whose opinions on the two media are based in hands on experience not on some bizarre self serving measure dubbed "general accpetance." If one cares to look they will find arguments that actually are logical and based in fact and experience. =3DA0as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. =3DA0Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. Forget the =A0failed llogic of this "general acceptance" argument and name one cutting engineer doing this manually these days. I'm not even going to limit this hoice to top flight cutting engineers. none of them are doing this manually. Just name one anywhere these days. http://www.co-bw.com/Recording_Mastering_Vinyl.htm "FIG. 1: The Neumann AM-32 lathe at Infrasonic Sound. The large dial on t= he control panel at the right can be used to manually regulate the number of lines etched into the master lacquer." LOL reallY Arny? This was the best you could come up with? "Can be?" You know what comes with "can be" do you not Arny? I'll give a hint, but doesn't have to be. So what are you telling me Scott? That a robot puts its mechanical hand o= n that large dial and thus the cutting process is entirely computer controlled? ;-) A no Arny but I will tell you that an option is an option. and that is an option on that cutting lathe. An_Option better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. How so? I underscored this point shortly in the post you are responding to. The proof of any alleged technical advance is better performance in the e= nd product, as delivered, or lowered cost, or better consistency, etc. Which is what we get with better laquers. Where is reliable evidence of improved performance from modern LPs as compared to SOTA products from the golden age of the LP which was about 4= 0 years ago? It's in the records themselves Arny. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than w=3D ell made LPs from the 60s and 70s. But you are using fatally flawed equipment. You have thus far shown zero reliable evidence to back that up, Scott. You're just being unecessarily insulting. :-( But you have told us what you have in the way of a turntable/arm and cartridge. It is substandard and hardly state of the art. That is a simple observation, nothing more nothing less. It is inadequate to make any meaningful measurements to judge the state of the art in vinyl production. Please provide needle drops from the relevant recordings that support you= r claims. When you agree to hear them in proctored double blind tests |
#389
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:41 -0800, KH wrote
(in article ): On 2/15/2011 6:31 AM, Audio Empire wrote: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 17:57:38 -0800, ScottW wrote (in ): I've heard Pink Floyd live....I actually like the reproductions from my system(s) much much better. Even going all the way back my Original Large Advents. It's not even close. Live is, IMO, sometimes overrated ![]() ScottW I'm sorry, I cannot get past the notion that listening to a musical group through loudspeakers (even any acoustical ones) is hearing that group "live". To me the only differences between hearing a PA system of a rock group and listening to a recording of that group on one's own stereo system is the quality of the loudspeakers and the fact that the concert is a "shared" experience. Well, there's more overlap than you seem to think, or you have a very narrow definition of rock/pop. I don't believe any of the orchestras accompanying groups such as Procol Harum or Renaissance, in their orchestral shows, being amplified. And the "unplugged" MTV performance of 10,000 Maniacs was IMO clearly their best work. The "Rule", no, but there's a lot of hybrid stuff out there where maybe only vocals are amplified (new age stuff like Nightnoise, Loreena McKennitt, for e.g., or folk for example), where the "pure" acoustic performances involved are live by any reasonable definition. Since I don't have any knowledge about "orchestras accompanying groups", I obviously wasn't talking about that kind of concert. I was talking about the type I've seen depicted that show rock groups on stage with fireworks, and lots of microphones and PA speakers, I was in Rome a number of years ago at the Roman Forum one Sunday afternoon. Paul McCartney was giving a concert at the Colosseum and there were huge scaffolds with speakers on them lining the street for more than half a mile. Even though I wasn't at the concert (I was touring the Forum and the Palatine) I could hear the entire concert - it was uncomfortably loud - even that far away. They must have a million Watts of amplifier power. Nobody heard that concert un-amplified. Perhaps you should change your description to "acoustic" music. Because it's hard to dispute that musicians playing instruments right there in front of you is not "live". But what the audience hears is NOT the actual instruments playing, it's a facsimile of the performance picked up by microphones, electronically amplified and EQ'd, and heard via loudspeakers. Have you ever walked down the street and passed an open doorway to a night spot and heard a small band playing inside? Without even entering the establishment, or even seeing inside, just hearing the music wafting through the open door, something tells you "That's live music playing in there!" Nothing can reproduce that sound. Were it the best stereo system in the world in that club, you wouldn't be fooled into thinking it was real, live music playing and The finest PA equipment isn't even THAT good! But, clearly there's a broad gray line between what constitutes a 'concert' versus a 'performance event' where the music merely accompanies the visual spectacle. Usually, when the folks on stage are dressed in Halloween costumes, it's the latter :-) 'Course, that's just my opinion. Well, these bands are certainly a "performance event" and the musicians are certainly playing their instruments "live", it's just that the audience isn't hearing the direct, live sound of those instruments, but rather, as I said earlier, a technically augmented facsimile thereof. |
#390
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:16 -0800, David E. Bath wrote
(in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. "So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors..." My only point. Thank you Mr. Bath. |
#391
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 05:36:52 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Scott" wrote in message On Feb 15, 5:30=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. =A0There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Since when is 'general acceptance" any sort of test of the state of the art? If you want to quibble with my choice of words, then enjoy! Experience shows that the general acceptance or non-acceptance of an alleged technology after decades of experience is the world's most relevant evaluation of that technology. May as well say CD having a wider dynamic range fails the test of "general acceptance" due to the general use of compression. You're conflating mastering for sitautions where dynamic range is detrimental to listening enjoyment in say mobile or other noisy environments, with the limiations of a medium. We've discussed this to death, so I won't be distracted by this essentially OT comment. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. =A0Classic Records for ex= ample if you can believe their PR. I think what you mean is there are still people cutting with laquer. And it is true that a lot of cutting engineers think laquer is still the superior medium for cutting records. Hence my statement that DMM which is cutting metal and not laquer, has failed the test of general acceptance. Wikipeida says that DMM was introduced in 1974, so the technology is now over 35 years old. The "decades of experience" criteria has been met. =A0as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. =A0Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. Forget the failed llogic of this "general acceptance" argument and name one cutting engineer doing this manually these days. I'm not even going to limit this hoice to top flight cutting engineers. none of them are doing this manually. Just name one anywhere these days. http://www.co-bw.com/Recording_Mastering_Vinyl.htm "FIG. 1: The Neumann AM-32 lathe at Infrasonic Sound. The large dial on the control panel at the right can be used to manually regulate the number of lines etched into the master lacquer." So what are you telling me Scott? That a robot puts its mechanical hand on that large dial and thus the cutting process is entirely computer controlled? ;-) HMM. Just because it's there doesn't mean that anybody uses it . I know people with late model cars that have automatic transmissions in them. Across the gate on the shifter, from PRNDL, is a smaller gate marked + and - that allows to the driver to change gears manually by pushing that stick or, often by pressing buttons on the back of the steering wheel. Most people NEVER use that feature. They just leave the thing in the automatic mode. Automatic variable pitch has been used to master vinyl records since the 1950's (Mercury Records called it "Margin Control" and advertised it loudly on the covers of their "Living Presence" album covers). better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. How so? I underscored this point shortly in the post you are responding to. The proof of any alleged technical advance is better performance in the end product, as delivered, or lowered cost, or better consistency, etc. Where is reliable evidence of improved performance from modern LPs as compared to SOTA products from the golden age of the LP which was about 40 years ago? If carefully-crafted products like the modern HFN test record are matched by SOTA product from CBS labs in the 60s and 70s, then we have solid evidence that no actual technical advances improving final quality have been made. We have further proof in the absence of refereed technical papers about verifiable technical advances from the last several decades. LP cutting and production has "stabilized technology" written all over it. I wouldn't use the HFN test record as the last word in modern vinyl production were I you. It's adequate for it's purpose, but no more. For example, I found references to the use of the Neumann AM-32 cutting lathe by modern LP mastering experts such as the one proudly mentioned above, for the production of a recording that was released in 1983. That was 28 years ago. That doesn't mean anything. Just because the actual lathe is old, doesn't mean that the cutting heads, lacquer material, and ancillary electronics aren't state-of-the-art. Lathes don't really wear out (although parts of them may wear, they can be replaced - even if the mastering studio has to have them custom made. Lathes and cutting decks are very expensive and I happen to know that some cutting labs are still using Scully lathes more than 40 years old - because they still do the job. Of course, the Ortofon heads are new, the electronics are new, etc. These old workhorses are kind of like the audio equivalent of a B-52 bomber's airframe and for much the same reason. They both represented a mature technology when they were built and a modern replacement would be, basically just the same. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than w= ell made LPs from the 60s and 70s. But you are using fatally flawed equipment. You have thus far shown zero reliable evidence to back that up, Scott. You're just being unecessarily insulting. :-( Actually, you have mentioned here what your turntable playback systems consist of, so it is very possible that Scott finds that equipment flawed. |
#392
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 07:10:43 -0800, Scott wrote
(in article ): On Feb 16, 5:36=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Scott" wrote in message On Feb 15, 5:30=3DA0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. =3DA0There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Since when is 'general acceptance" any sort of test of the state of the art? If you want to quibble with my choice of words, then enjoy! It's not the words arny it's the very idea behind them that is absurd. Experience shows that the general acceptance or non-acceptance of an alle= ged technology after decades of experience is the world's most relevant evaluation of that technology. Experience shows no such thing. Quite the opposite. History shows that state of the art often is a lonesome place where others often never follow for many reasons. By your logic things like the heat shields on the space shuttle are not state of the art because they are not widely used. In Arny's defense, here (not that Arny NEEDS any help in that department. He's more than capable of defending his own opinions - and often is the only person who CAN 8^) I have to disagree with your analogy. Heat shields for spacecraft ARE widely used - on spacecraft. The only reason that they aren't used in other applications is because they aren't NEEDED in other applications. Nothing, other than spacecraft, that gets that hot, need heat shields that effective AND that lightweight. Record cutting lathes aren't widely used (or used at all, for that matter) outside of the phonograph mastering industry either, for the same reason. I suspect that Arny was saying that these technologies weren't widely accepted even in the phonograph record mastering industry and he is correct. It is used, and records cut with it are superior, but it is obviously more expensive than standard lacquer mastering and I suspect that it's probably because today's lacquer blanks offer similar performance without the expense. It's all about materials technology. May as well say CD having a wider dynamic range fails the test of "general acceptance" due to the general use of compression. You're conflating mastering for sitautions where dynamic range is detrimental to listening enjoyment in say mobile or other noisy environments, with the limiations of a medium. =A0We've discussed this to death, so I won't be distracted by this essentially OT comment. I'm not conflating anything just showing how your argument fails when applied to other things. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. =3DA0Classic Records for ex=3D ample if you can believe their PR. I think what you mean is there are still people cutting with laquer. And it is true that a lot of cutting engineers think laquer is still the superior medium for cutting records. Hence my statement that DMM which is cutting metal and not laquer, has failed the test of general acceptance. =A0Wikipeida says that DMM was introduced in 1974, so the technology is now over 35 years old. =A0The "decades of experience" criteria has been met. It is a weak argument borne out of a lack of information. If one wants to learn more on the subject they would be better served by talking to mastering engineers whose opinions on the two media are based in hands on experience not on some bizarre self serving measure dubbed "general accpetance." If one cares to look they will find arguments that actually are logical and based in fact and experience. Well, the fact that the only DMM mastering facilities in The USA belong to Church of Scientology - for mastering ONLY the speeches of L. Ron Hunbbard and other church-related materials, shows that the technology is thin on the ground here. There are a number of DMM facilities in Europe, but I'm not sure how much actual DMM work they do. |
#393
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 05:37:56 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote
(in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Tue, 15 Feb 2011 05:30:47 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): "Audio Empire" wrote in message On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 09:56:57 -0800, Arny Krueger wrote (in article ): Serious development of the vinyl LP pretty well petered out in the middle-late 1960s. There have been no new technical developments that were generally accepted since then. I think that you'd be surprised at just how incorrect that assessment is. DMM is one innovation that has been added since the '60s DMM fails the test of general acceptance. Plenty of recordings are being made by traditional metal plating, to this day. Classic Records for example if you can believe their PR. Many current releases are DMM mastered and many aren't. Those that are benefit from it with quieter surfaces. Also records are premium products these days with some titles costing as much as $60. So what? Much of the cost of items such as LPs come from production volumes. They all use super-high-grade virgin vinyl which was generally not used in vinyl's heyday - especially for non-classical releases. So what? That's not a technological advance, its just quality control. It's a materials technological advance. The vinyl mix used today in these audiophile pressings is much different and much improved over what was used in records before the CD. And yes, It's quality control too. Since volumes are smaller, the pressing plants can afford to do things that weren't practical in a high-volume environment. Things like waiting for the records to cool sufficiently before removing them from the presses, using enough vinyl to avoid underflow, more thorough cleaning of the mold-release from the records before packaging, etc. Even where virgin vinyl was used, it wasn't of the quality used today. Prove that with information from a reliable source. PVC has been around since before WW2 and was a stable technology, even in the 60s and 70s. Records aren't made from pure PVC (you don't know that? Wow!). It's a mix, with additives such as plasticizers and stabilizers and anti-static compounds among others. Today's vinyl mixes are made with different versions of those additives than were the vinyls of yore. You can LOOK at a modern record and tell that. I can't find anything on the web about this, but there have been a couple of articles about modern record production in Hi-Fi News and Record Review in the last year or so. as well as things like digital lathe control, Again failing the test of general acceptance. Many experienced cutters prefer to control the lathe manually to this day. And many don't. You've made my point. Thank you. There is no "test of general acceptance". You're denying the way that we all know that the world works. And even if there were, I doubt that you have a poll of all the mastering engineers in the business today to be able to tell us what the "general acceptance" actually is. IOW, you are basing these conclusions on your own prejudices. The advantage of automated cutting would be reduction of operator skill and more reliable results. Even in the 60s mastering engineers could manually preview an entire recording before hand and work out a script of adjustments that would equal what a computer could do because it was based on human wisdom and perfect foreknowlege. better sounding acceleration limiters for the cutter stylus, Ditto. Ditto to you as well. IKWYABWAI. better "lacquer" disc materials (less noise) Questionable benefit. To who? You? Given your prejudicial attitude toward vinyl, I don't doubt that everything associated with LPs is of "questionable value" to you. Show me the beef, which in this case is superior technical performance. My measurements show that modern 180 gram pressings are no quieter than well made LPs from the 60s and 70s. Your measurements? Where would you find a large enough cross section of un-played pressings from the 60s and 70's with which to make such a comparison? I bought a goodly number of test records off of eBay a few years back. Some were obviously virgin or close to it. They were amazingly plentiful and economical to obtain. I don't need a cross-section to make my point. All I needed to find was a few very good ones. I'm not commenting on the general run of LPs, but the respective SOTA, then and now. Test Records? That's your criteria for SOTA vinyl production, then and now? 'Nuff said! |
#394
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:16 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. "So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors..." My only point. Thank you Mr. Bath. But you missed my point when I used "extremely" vs. your "very". Errors are always fully corrected unless the signal is subsumed by the noise, a condition that nvers happens except in RF applications when the signal is either blocked or the distance between the source and the destination is far beyond the design parameters. In the case of CDs and DVDs it won't happen unless the player/reader is broken, or the disc is severely damaged. -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |
#395
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 18:14:35 -0800, David E. Bath wrote
(in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:16 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. "So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors..." My only point. Thank you Mr. Bath. But you missed my point when I used "extremely" vs. your "very". Errors are always fully corrected unless the signal is subsumed by the noise, a condition that nvers happens except in RF applications when the signal is either blocked or the distance between the source and the destination is far beyond the design parameters. In the case of CDs and DVDs it won't happen unless the player/reader is broken, or the disc is severely damaged. First of all I don't recall using the word "very" in the part of my post that you quoted. Secondly, my point was that digital can be theoretically serially copied forever, or until some situation arises whereby noise so swamps the data that it's unrecoverable which I also said almost never happens. So what are we arguing about, the word "almost"? Give it up! |
#396
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 16, 5:20=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote:
"Scott" wrote in message On Feb 15, 5:31=3DA0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Harry Lavo" wrote in message Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. =3DA0Using the SACD version. =3DA0And the culprit....the preamp. =3DA0 Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. =3DA0So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and list=3D en to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the hi=3D gh end audiophile comments on this thread.- Do you have any pictures or first hand accounts of the mic positions for the recording of the clocks on DSOTM? No experienced recording engineer would need such a thing to reach the conclusion that I've provided. Hmmm. That may very well be true. But the fact is *you* reached completely eroneous conclusions. Perhaps you should steer clear of Dark Side of the Moon as a reference. If you've miced different instruments in different rooms different ways, = a recording paints a fairly detailed sonic picture of how the recording was miced. If you've worked the room, then mic locations can be estimated fai= rly well. What is known for sure is that DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead. =A0It is co= mmon to mic close and add the sonic perspective electronically during the mix. Done right, this can fool most listeners. And so based on the false assumption that the clocks were recorded in an acoustically dead studio room with your experienced ears as a recording engineer you concluded that the clocks were recorded in a dead studio room and were close miced. Yikes. Arny, the album was recorded at Abby Road studios. The recording spaces are hardly dead there. Kind of funny that we have this interesting article from one Jon Atkinson on this recording. http://www.stereophile.com/news/11649/ " since I recorded an album at Abbey Road Studio at the same time that the Floyd were there making DSotM, I always thought the album did an excellent job of preserving the characteristic sound of the studio with which I had become so familiar. Yet when I first listened to the CD layer of the reissue, it didn't sound like Abbey Road at all. The sonic subtleties that identify the recording venue and its unique reverb chamber had been eliminated or smoothed over. They were there on the SACD, so some investigation was called for." And yet you conclusions direactly above based on your expertise as a recordist was "DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead." ooops...... Oh and by the way....The clocks weren't recorded in the studio. They were recorded in various clock shops individually. Do you know of any clock shops that are acoustically dead? Again let's look at your assertions as quoted from above. "Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room." "What is known for sure is that DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead." " No experienced recording engineer would need such a thing (a photo of the mic configuration from the actual recording session) to reach the conclusion that I've provided." Maybe the CD you have used as a reference is the one with the one being examined by Jon Atkinson with the screwed up CD layer? that might explain how one could listen to the recording and draw such eroneous conclusions about the recording venues given your assertions about the listening skills of "experienced recording engineers" such as yourself. But we don't know which version of DSOTM you listen to. I did ask after you posted that terribly inadequate list of variaious masterings. You never answered. mastering does matter. doing your homework does help in chosing the better masterings. DSOTM has not been a very good reference for you so far on this thread. |
#397
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 18:14:35 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:16 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. "So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors..." My only point. Thank you Mr. Bath. But you missed my point when I used "extremely" vs. your "very". Errors are always fully corrected unless the signal is subsumed by the noise, a condition that nvers happens except in RF applications when the signal is either blocked or the distance between the source and the destination is far beyond the design parameters. In the case of CDs and DVDs it won't happen unless the player/reader is broken, or the disc is severely damaged. First of all I don't recall using the word "very" in the part of my post that you quoted. Secondly, my point was that digital can be theoretically serially copied forever, or until some situation arises whereby noise so swamps the data that it's unrecoverable which I also said almost never happens. So what are we arguing about, the word "almost"? Give it up! True, you did not use "very", I did, but I requalified with "extremely" but you chose to ignore that requalification to suit your purpose in trying to use my statement to "prove" yours. Well I was refuting your statement not agreeing with it. The copying of digtial data to and from CDs and DVDs will always be completely error free unless a defective device or defective disc is used. Period. -- David Bath - RAHE Co-moderator |
#398
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Scott" wrote in message
On Feb 16, 5:20=A0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Scott" wrote in message On Feb 15, 5:31=3DA0am, "Arny Krueger" wrote: "Harry Lavo" wrote in message Actually, I've heard the clocks sound very real (my grandparents had a house full of wind-ups...I've head at least eight of various sizes go off at once) to sounding very unreal. =3DA0Using the SACD version. =3DA0And the culprit....the preamp. =3DA0 Audio Research SP6B vs. Onkyo P301. =3DA0So much for big-box store electronics. I own a weight-driven grandfather clock with chime movement, so I know exactly what one sounds like. I can move it in my listening room and list=3D en to it chime, if I want the true live experience. Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room. The DSOTM recording was miced incredibly close, so any claims that close-micing bodes poorly for fidelity is brought into question by the hi=3D gh end audiophile comments on this thread.- Do you have any pictures or first hand accounts of the mic positions for the recording of the clocks on DSOTM? No experienced recording engineer would need such a thing to reach the conclusion that I've provided. Hmmm. That may very well be true. But the fact is *you* reached completely eroneous conclusions. Only in your opinion. Now, you're overreaching your position and pretending to be a cosmic authority. Perhaps you should steer clear of Dark Side of the Moon as a reference. Perhaps you should remember that you don't rule the universe. Proof by assertion is no proof at all. If you've got evidence, then offer it. If you have something to say but OSAF , I'm sure we'd be all glad to hear it from you. If you've miced different instruments in different rooms different ways, = a recording paints a fairly detailed sonic picture of how the recording was miced. If you've worked the room, then mic locations can be estimated fai= rly well. What is known for sure is that DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead. =A0It is co= mmon to mic close and add the sonic perspective electronically during the mix. Done right, this can fool most listeners. And so based on the false assumption that the clocks were recorded in an acoustically dead studio room with your experienced ears as a recording engineer you concluded that the clocks were recorded in a dead studio room and were close miced. No such thing! Yikes. Arny, the album was recorded at Abby Road studios. The recording spaces are hardly dead there. Scott, only a person who has never been in a real world recording studio and has no clue about how recording is done in studios could make these claims. Recording studios the size of Abbey Road are composed of multiple highly dissimilar rooms. The spaces in a real-world recording studio vary all over the map, and they can be modified at will for a given tracking session using portable sound proofing panels or ad hoc sound absorbing materials such as shipping blankets. For example, consider http://www.abbeyroad.com/studios This describes the three (3) main studios at Abbey Road which clearly vary in size and general acoustical properties. Studio 1 can hold a 110 piece orchestra and a 100 voice choir. It strongly differs from a regular concert hall because there's no seating space for all that sound to go into. There are no dozens of rows of padded seats and no people sitting in them. Now look closely at how the microphones are deployed. First off, there are dozens of them. At least half the musicians seem to have their own microphone. This corresponds to the much-vilified (by RAHE) close micing. One purpose of close micing is to vastly reduce the influence of the acoustics of the room. Studio two is not a big room. Interstingly enough we can see in the background right a cubby hole that is filled with a dozen or more portable acoustic absorbers. They are not deployed right now, but this is not a picture of a real-world recording session. Its capacity is stated as being 55, which is less than a quarter of the size of studio one. Take a piano, surround it with sound absorbers and the room is very far from being reverberent. Studio three's description says it all: "The recording space was designed to have a natural and flexible acoustic, with multiple isolation booths." Hmm, what do they do with the isolation booths? I'll bet they record in them! ;-) Scott, in contrast to your apparent claim there isn't just one studio at Abbey Road. There are three major studios whose size and basic layout and construction varies considerably, and at least one very small one. Furthermore there is considerable evidence that the acoustics of these rooms is modified to suit for each recording session and also for different instruments in the same recording session. We have a clear record that there are many isolation booths which are typically very dead little rooms. Also, there are inherent variations in the acoustics of a given room based on how many musicans are working at any particular time. Move 210 musicans into a room the size of Studio One or 55 into Studio Two, and its acoustics change dramatically from the same room when it is nearly empty. Both configurations can make sense depending on what outcome is desired. Note that the page for the "Penthouse" mentions the following: "The Penthouse also has a small isolation booth designed to record single instruments..." Almost every studio of substance has portable isolation booths and portable sound absorbing panels. Without detailed documentation of each recording session you have no idea what actually happened. Of course Scott in your apparent state of ignorance, inexperience and with an overwhelming desire for a rush to judgement, you show zero awareness of any of the practical exingencies of working in a real world recording studio. Kind of funny that we have this interesting article from one Jon Atkinson on this recording. http://www.stereophile.com/news/11649/ " since I recorded an album at Abbey Road Studio at the same time that the Floyd were there making DSotM, I always thought the album did an excellent job of preserving the characteristic sound of the studio with which I had become so familiar. Yet when I first listened to the CD layer of the reissue, it didn't sound like Abbey Road at all. The sonic subtleties that identify the recording venue and its unique reverb chamber had been eliminated or smoothed over. They were there on the SACD, so some investigation was called for." Scott you just skewered yourself. If all of the spaces at Abbey Road were so reverberent, why did they need to add artifical reverb from a reverb chamber to some of the recordings? And yet you conclusions direactly above based on your expertise as a recordist was "DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead." ooops...... No oops. Real world experience. Oh and by the way....The clocks weren't recorded in the studio. They were recorded in various clock shops individually. Do you know of any clock shops that are acoustically dead? Any store or workshop can be quite acoustically dead when the machines and the displays break up the spaces and add diffusion and absorbtion. Compare and contrast a car dealership with a fabric store. One is usually highly reverberent with tile floors and a lot of glass, while the other one is usually very dead for pretty obvious reasons - all those bolts of fabric add a lot of absorbtion and some diffusion. You've never noticed this when you visit stores and workshops, Scott? Your ears must be turned off when you go out into the real world. Again let's look at your assertions as quoted from above. "Getting the DSOTM clock to sound like it is entirely possible with the CD version, mid-fi electronics and speakers that are well-configured for the room." "What is known for sure is that DSOTM was created in a studio or studios, which are generally (with a few exceptions) acousticaly dead." " No experienced recording engineer would need such a thing (a photo of the mic configuration from the actual recording session) to reach the conclusion that I've provided." I'll stick by my statements, Scott. You've just treated us to an exposition of your lack of awareness of what you hear when you visit the same places we all go to every day. You seem to have just conflated a large complex like Abbey Road into just one room, and then claimed that its acoustics are always the same when we have photographic evidence and experiential evidence that the acoustics of those rooms can vary all over the map. I thought you worked in the motion picture business, Scott. Haven't you noticed that making motion pictures involves recording sound as well as moving pictures and stills? Ever take a look at how they do that? How many recording spaces are at the studios you work for? How many absorbtive panels? How many isolation booths? How many gobos? |
#399
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Thu, 17 Feb 2011 18:26:23 -0800, David E. Bath wrote
(in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 18:14:35 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:16 -0800, David E. Bath wrote (in article ): In article , Audio Empire writes: On Mon, 14 Feb 2011 15:21:22 -0800, ScottW wrote (in article ): Nor does it happen in theory. The recording of digital music is just copying bits. There is nothing passed from a source to a recording except the bits. There may be some "noise" in the system along the way but as long as that noise doesn't change the value of a bit...it's irrelevant and won't get passed along to the next stage. There is no cumulative effect and it's very common to be able create bit identical recreations of massive data files....digital music is no different. So you're saying that there is no circumstance under which background noise can get so high that it makes detection of the digital data difficult? Tell that to people who deal in digital communications. I was a fiber optic engineer for over 20 years and in the digital RF field now. The noise issue is handled in the exact same manner as in CDs and DVDs - error correction. So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors, which in the case of digital communications is extremely weak, these is no loss if data. "So unless the signal level is so very weak that the error correction cannot correct all errors..." My only point. Thank you Mr. Bath. But you missed my point when I used "extremely" vs. your "very". Errors are always fully corrected unless the signal is subsumed by the noise, a condition that nvers happens except in RF applications when the signal is either blocked or the distance between the source and the destination is far beyond the design parameters. In the case of CDs and DVDs it won't happen unless the player/reader is broken, or the disc is severely damaged. First of all I don't recall using the word "very" in the part of my post that you quoted. Secondly, my point was that digital can be theoretically serially copied forever, or until some situation arises whereby noise so swamps the data that it's unrecoverable which I also said almost never happens. So what are we arguing about, the word "almost"? Give it up! True, you did not use "very", I did, but I requalified with "extremely" but you chose to ignore that requalification to suit your purpose in trying to use my statement to "prove" yours. Well I was refuting your statement not agreeing with it. The copying of digtial data to and from CDs and DVDs will always be completely error free unless a defective device or defective disc is used. Period. You're still nit-picking and flogging a deceased equine. I have no more to say on the subject, and I'm going stop now before I say what I REALLY think and get myself kicked off this forum. |
#400
![]()
Posted to rec.audio.high-end
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 2/16/2011 1:06 PM, Audio Empire wrote:
On Wed, 16 Feb 2011 01:22:41 -0800, KH wrote (in ): snip Since I don't have any knowledge about "orchestras accompanying groups", I obviously wasn't talking about that kind of concert. That was kind of the point. You seem to want to lump everything but classical or jazz into "non-live" music. That just isn't the case. I was talking about the type I've seen depicted that show rock groups on stage with fireworks, and lots of microphones and PA speakers, I was in Rome a number of years ago at the Roman Forum one Sunday afternoon. Paul McCartney was giving a concert at the Colosseum and there were huge scaffolds with speakers on them lining the street for more than half a mile. Even though I wasn't at the concert (I was touring the Forum and the Palatine) I could hear the entire concert - it was uncomfortably loud - even that far away. They must have a million Watts of amplifier power. Nobody heard that concert un-amplified. Well, the first problem here is why would you would listen to McCartney ;-) But point taken. Fireworks and the like (as with the Halloween like affectations) don't usually accompany acoustic concerts IME. Perhaps you should change your description to "acoustic" music. Because it's hard to dispute that musicians playing instruments right there in front of you is not "live". But what the audience hears is NOT the actual instruments playing, it's a facsimile of the performance picked up by microphones, electronically amplified and EQ'd, and heard via loudspeakers. Have you ever walked down the street and passed an open doorway to a night spot and heard a small band playing inside? Without even entering the establishment, or even seeing inside, just hearing the music wafting through the open door, something tells you "That's live music playing in there!" Well, yes I have. Most of the time, those small bands have been playing amplified music. Nothing can reproduce that sound. Were it the best stereo system in the world in that club, you wouldn't be fooled into thinking it was real, live music playing and The finest PA equipment isn't even THAT good! Of course not. But that holds true for any type of music, acoustic, amplified, or otherwise. Say's far more about the limits of the illusion created by stereo in a home setting than it does about acoustic versus amplified music IMO. But, clearly there's a broad gray line between what constitutes a 'concert' versus a 'performance event' where the music merely accompanies the visual spectacle. Usually, when the folks on stage are dressed in Halloween costumes, it's the latter :-) 'Course, that's just my opinion. Well, these bands are certainly a "performance event" and the musicians are certainly playing their instruments "live", it's just that the audience isn't hearing the direct, live sound of those instruments, but rather, as I said earlier, a technically augmented facsimile thereof. So you're saying that if you walked by that cafe, without looking in, and heard a band playing using electric guitars, for example, you personally wouldn't be able to tell if it was live or playing through a PA system? Keith |
Reply |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Another perspective | Car Audio | |||
fm tuners (another perspective) | High End Audio | |||
A Different Perspective on current events | Pro Audio | |||
'Billion' in perspective. | Marketplace |