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#81
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Dave wrote:
"Steven Sullivan" wrote in message ... Millions of people fell in love with the Beatles's music based on tiny transistor radio or TV speakers and horrendously post-processed American LPs, for example. That is very true. As I noted everyone enjoys music in different ways. than what was available in the so called golden age you allude to. Yes, we listened on transistor (AM no less) radios. We listened on record players with ceramic cartridges. But that was the best out there at the time. If you wanted a portable radio, the transistor with the 9V battery was what was available. If you wanted a record player, that was what was available. The technology which allowed more realistic reproduction of music was evolving, and we were UPGRADING when we bought the BSR with the Shure cartridge, or when we traded in the cassette deck for a CD player. My point, which may not have been clear, is that we are now DOWNGRADING or BACKSLIDING... the technology certainly exists to do better, but WE'RE NO LONGER INTERESTED IN BUYING IT. What technology is that? Portable players are vastly superior to what they were in the old days, and the difference between them and 'high end' vastly less. The inherent sound quality of 128kpbs mp3's Which is actually pretty good if you use a good encoder -- better than 60's era transistor radio for sure -- but is also increasingly rare; iTunes switched to a 256 kbps encode rate some time ago (which argues against degradation). And more an more people are aware of lossless compression.(ditto) is LESS than that of the commercial CD but that's the change we're making. The sound quality of a compressed tune with 10dB of dynamic range is LESS than what we got on a crappy LP, or perhaps as bad in a different way. Back then that was the best technology could offer... now it's not. It's hardly different from offering 45s and 'processed' LPs in the 60s. Except that today's '45s' ' are vastly closer to their fancier counterparts than they were then. The loudness wars have been with us since the days of 45s and car radio. Yes, more truth. The almighty dollar will always win, and if 95% of the music-buying population is satisfied with 128kpbs downloaded lossy files, that's what the market's going to offer. Have you done ABX comparisons of good 128 kbps mp3s vs source? You might be shocked at the results. -- -S We have it in our power to begin the world over again - Thomas Paine |
#82
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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On May 20, 10:53*pm, Kalman Rubinson wrote:
On 20 May 2009 23:06:24 GMT, wrote: On May 20, 12:57*pm, "Harry Lavo" wrote: So we have individual preferences. *But the fact that you don't like multichannel is no reason to diss it, as happened in the original post of this thread I think it is a pretty darned good reason. This is a hobby of aesthetics. If one doesn't like the aesthetic then one has a pretty good reason to diss. It is also a field of science and engineering. *Controlled studies (see Toole's book for a review) have shown that multichannel recordings are more accurate and believable conveyors of the original event. Now, if you don't like 'em, that's OK. *OTOH, you have no data or science that validates your preference, so your 'dissing' doesn't rise to more than a personal preference. Huh? Preferences need data and science to be valid? Mine seem to work just fine for me without any scientific validation. |
#83
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Harry Lavo wrote:
I have classical multitrack recordings where there is most emphatically musical material coming from the side or back speakers. There are plenty of classical pieces where the score specifically says that that is supposed to be the way it should be in a live performance. This include such things as offstage trumpets, singers or even whole mini-orchestras at the real of the hall, etc. Doug McDonald |
#84
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Sonnova" wrote in message
... On Wed, 20 May 2009 15:13:15 -0700, Dave wrote (in article ): To me, it's bad. Not "TO you", but "FOR you" it would be bad. I think the old adage "you can't miss what you've never had" might come into play here. Don't get me wrong, my kids and their generation are not unhappy people. _I_ would be unhappy living at that pace, as I expect would you and many others of a certain age, but it's all they've ever known. Since birth they've had 100 cable tv (now satellite) channels 24x7, the internet's been a force to reckon with since they learned to read, video games have always been network-based multi-player affairs and maybe 1 person out of 100 that they know doesn't routinely text-message/Facebook/MySpace/Tweet. So much information is available to them, all the time, that I'm quite sure just filtering, collating and storing the useful bits is a technical skill one must develop with practice... to the uninitiated it's just overwhelming and unpleasant. I believe something has been lost, but I'd bet good money my grandparents said the same type of thing to my parents. Perhaps history will show that something has indeed been gained as well. |
#85
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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wrote in message
Huh? Preferences need data and science to be valid? Mine seem to work just fine for me without any scientific validation. The problem isn't preferences, the problems often are the lessons in weird science that often come with them. Many of your comments about the audible deficiencies of digital vis-a-vis vinyl come to mind. |
#86
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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#87
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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In article ,
"mcdonaldREMOVE TO ACTUALLY REACH wrote: I have classical multitrack recordings where there is most emphatically musical material coming from the side or back speakers. There are plenty of classical pieces where the score specifically says that that is supposed to be the way it should be in a live performance. This include such things as offstage trumpets, singers or even whole mini-orchestras at the real of the hall, etc. Doug McDonald True, Doug; there are several works with off-stage parts...several operas, the Verdi Requiem, the new Corigliano work "Circus Maximus". But the number is a drop in the bucket of the classical canon. |
#88
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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Rob Tweed writes:
On 20 May 2009 18:07:28 GMT, Sonnova wrote: Unfortunately, what you are saying (and you are right), is that commerce has replaced culture. Very sad. Come on now, it has always been thus. Even Mozart only wrote his works for money at the end of the day. I agree art has always ridden on the back of commerce. But these days, commerce merely drags art alongside by a leash. [ Moderator's note: please steer back towards more clearly audio -related topics. -dsr ] *R* *H* -- Hug your sweetie today. |
#89
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Harry Lavo" wrote in message
... Had an interesting experience this last week. I am actively involved in a local political campaign, and held a meeting at my house last week. Several folks commented on my audio system, and after the meeting several asked if they could hear it. So I put the Beatles "Love" album on, in all it's multichannel glory. Jaws dropped, but the audition was very brief, and we had no time to talk afterward. Later during the week one of the listeners, a young man in his late '20's/early '30's took me aside and said by a wide margin that was the best reproduced music he had ever heard. Now the interesting thing is....this guy is very bright, college educated, grew up in one of Connecticut's wealthy shoreline communities, is a classical music buff, is fully IPhone'd and totally conversant and involved in today's technology. Yet he had NEVER IN HIS LIFE heard a really good audio system or even knew they existed. This tended to confirm my suspicion that here in the USofA we don't sell more good audio because folks simply don't know about of its existence. Thanks to our dumbed-down society and the dominance of the big-box stores. Oh, to live in Britain! How far we have fallen as a musically-literate society. -- Harry Lavo Holyoke, MA Harry, you make several excellent points, and the discussion introduces others. Three issues are of concern to me: Many young people have never heard a good audio system (stereo, MC, or otherwise); Few people appreciate good music, and few would have any interest in listening to a symphony or concerto in one sitting (And I would never, ever attempt to introduce "good music" to someone by playing Couperin, Buxtehude, Du Pre, or Jan Pieterszoon.); Most "consumers" are so put off by the techno-babble and ridiculous prices related to high-end components that, quite understantably, they wouldn't want to deal with one of the few remaining high-end audio dealers in the first place. I see lots of good explanations and discussions of the problems, but I don't see many suggestions for resolving the problems. Here are a few suggestions: With respect to the fact that most people under 40 have never heard a good system (and definitely thinking "outside the box" for a moment), it seems to me that it would be a worthwhile endeavor to establish free or subsidized demonstration rooms to introduce more of the public to high fidelity audio reproduction. This might involve our accepting a small "tax" on purchases of high-end equipment, subscriptions to Streophile, etc., in order to set up such a "demonstration program." Support from benefactors of symphonies, opera companies, etc., would be another possible source of funding. - How, where, by whom, and how much are issues open to discussion, but my underlying theseis is that, in the long run, greater public exposure to and appreciation of good music reproduced on decent audio systems would benefit us all, from a cultural standpoint, and even with respect to our budgets. For example, as some may remember, AR introduced their air-suspension speakers (the AR1, AR2, and AR3?) by setting up and sponsoring listening rooms in one or more of the large New York train stations. Thousands of commuters and travelers could wander into one of these listening rooms and enjoy listening to the new AR systems for a few minutes without charge and without sales pressures, etc. Today it seems likely that more public exposure could be achieved by demonstrations in malls, convention centers, concert venues, etc. What might work would be a travelling demonstration team/group, perhaps sponsored and partially funded by one or more of the major audio firms, which would set up temporary (month-long?) demonstrations in some of the many vacant properties in area malls and the like, perhaps on a rotating schedule. The demonstrations would be a public interest "plus" to the mall, bringing in customers and perhaps justifying reduced charges. One important criteria IMO, would be that the systems demonstrated should be limited to products readily available at rational price levels. (No $20K amps or turntables.) In other words, the purpose is to introduce good music reproduction to the public and "sell" it as a worthwhile and practicable investment, not a high-end splurge item. The goal of such a program would be to introduce members of the public both to good audio reproduction systems and to good music. To increase the appreciation of both. - How would this benefit audiophiles from a financial standpoint? If a greater percentage of the public was "educated" relative to the existance of good audio reproduction at rational prices, and if more audio systems were sold, the industry could become less of a high-end, high-priced nitch market. Hopefully, more sales, to more "educated" consumers, could result in more rational price levels as a result of greater sales volumes. OK. It might not work, and there are lots of issues to be worked out. - What's your suggestion? Jim |
#90
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Posted to rec.audio.high-end
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"Jim Cate" wrote in message
... "Harry Lavo" wrote in message ... Here are a few suggestions: With respect to the fact that most people under 40 have never heard a good system (and definitely thinking "outside the box" for a moment), it seems to me that it would be a worthwhile endeavor to establish free or subsidized demonstration rooms to introduce more of the public to high fidelity audio reproduction. Interesting suggestion and, as you note, the only suggestion to date to deal with a phenomenon we've been witnessing for a generation. I like the idea of listening rooms, there is nothing like an actual demonstration. I don't know as the cost/benefit ratio could be sold to any manufacturers/resellers, it'd be a tough one given the tiny percentage of audiophiles and concert-goers today. And, I wonder, are we the whale-oil lamp affecionados as the era of cheap electric light begins? |
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