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I've picked up a few DVD Audio disks recently, mostly the Daniel
Berenboim Beethoven-Symphony DVDs. I've been pleased that they haven't been expensive ($13 at Fry's), but from an audio-engineering perspective, one thing about their use of surround sound strikes me as puzzling: If I were recording such a thing, I'd place the 5 mics within the orchestra, so that when you listen to it, you get the impression of being inside the orchestra. Orchestral seating plans vary of course, but based upon one fairly typical seating approach (just for illustration), center channel by the violas, left by the 'celli, right by the violins, right rear by the percussion, and left rear by the tuba/harp/piano/bass area. That or the right/left mirror image of that. Maybe that's because I'm fascinated by the performance experience more than the audience experience, so I want to feel as though I'm among the performers. Instead, they seem to be using the rear channels strictly for auditorium ambience, so they have their mics in back of the concert hall. Do any of you know of any orchestral surround-sound disks that give you the sensation that you're within the performers' seats rather than within the audience seats of the concert hall? |
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