A remarkable Redbook CD afternoon at Goodwin's High End

spazmatron

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Do you know anyone who plays the violin, try recording them playing in your listening room, I am sure you would find the results interesting, make several recordings only altering microphone position.
Keith.

i believe faddle plays a mean fiddle keith :cool:
 

adyc

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Do you know anyone who plays the violin, try recording them playing in your listening room, I am sure you would find the results interesting, make several recordings only altering microphone position.
Keith.

To be honest, I found the timbre or tonal of violin when I watched BBC promos on Tv is more accurate than any hi end hifi. I wonder whether most modern classical recordings have too much processing.
 

Al M.

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Do you know anyone who plays the violin, try recording them playing in your listening room, I am sure you would find the results interesting, make several recordings only altering microphone position.
Keith.

Yes, I've heard the microphone positioning is much more important than the recording format.

To be honest, I found the timbre or tonal of violin when I watched BBC promos on Tv is more accurate than any hi end hifi. I wonder whether most modern classical recordings have too much processing.

Have you tried listening to the violin tone with eyes closed wen watching TV? I have noticed that seeing the musicians play can deceive you into thinking the tone is much better than it is. I went from "oh this sounds great" on TV while watching to "oh this sounds crap" with eyes closed.
 

Purite Audio

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Yes, I've heard the microphone positioning is much more important than the recording format.



Have you tried listening to the violin tone with eyes closed wen watching TV? I have noticed that seeing the musicians play can deceive you into thinking the tone is much better than it is. I went from "oh this sounds great" on TV while watching to "oh this sounds crap" with eyes closed.
I suppose the point I am trying to make is, we may know what a violin sounds like when one is played in front of us, but when we listen at home we only have the reproduction of that violin , all we can hope to do IMHO is to play that reproduction as faithfully as possible.
Keith.
 

Fiddle Faddle

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Aug 7, 2015
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Do you know anyone who plays the violin, try recording them playing in your listening room, I am sure you would find the results interesting, make several recordings only altering microphone position.
Keith.

Well I've kicked around a bit with the instrument here and there myself over the years ;) And like the professionals I have also known, we have always auditioned instruments both under the ear and then had a colleague play them for us at a distance (sound quality is completely different one versus the other). I've only been professionally recorded twice - once as a soloist in the Sydney Opera House concert hall (violin and piano only) and also in a much smaller hall when I was the leader in Saint-Saens Danse Macabre (so a prominent solo role with orchestra). The playbacks were nothing like what I heard under the ear during those performances, but this is an extremely-well known phenomenon amongst stringed instrument players and the reason why under-the-ear and distance comparisons are so important.

It was also something I struggled with greatly as a student when my ear was developing. I would love the sound of the instrument under-the-ear in the practice room then my teacher would bag the instrument (and I did not like hers under-the-ear or even from 6 feet away but at 25 feet it sounded beautiful). I once auditioned a Nicolo Gagliano that again was nothing special under-the-ear but was remarkable from a distance.

Itzhak Perlman once commented that Heifetz sounded (in a concert hall) nothing like he did in his recordings - those RCA Living Stereos are very detailed and are the sorts of analogue recordings that I feel come very close to what a violin (or at least his in particular) sounded like (but not in a concert hall). But as Perlman pointed out, once you are in that hall, the sound takes on a totally different character. Infact, I had never been a Heifetz fan during the thick of the CD era. He just sounded so cold, harsh and steely in all of his CD recordings. But when I started buying all the vinyl reissues, I came to love his playing and sound. Suddenly I could appreciate it for what it really was, not being pummelled by the objectionable CD sound anymore. I've gone back to listen to those CDs in recent times and although they still don't sound right, they are much better on modern gear.

The best recording I have ever heard as regards what a violin really does sound like is a Cisco reissue on vinyl of Heifetz playing the Beethoven Kreutzer sonata. It is exceptional - you really do feel like you are in the room with him. I've heard nothing better in this respect. And if I am impressed with it on a modest Project RPM9 / Rondo Bronze front end, it would be even better again on higher quality gear.

http://store.acousticsounds.com/d/3...ethoven_Kreutzer_Sonata-180_Gram_Vinyl_Record

So far as my comments about 16 bit and violin sound, the closer the mics to the soloist and the less complex the work in terms of instrumentation, the better the result. There is a 1985 Decca recording made by Simon Eaden (Kyung-Wha Chung in recital). This was reissued onto one of those "XRCD" disks a few years back. That recording achieves an excellent result for the CD standard, but crucially it is just violin and piano with close miking in an ambient environment - meaning much detail gets dispersed in the real performance in any case (unlike the dry and damped acoustic of the Heifetz recording mentioned previously) and there is no complex miking nor extreme dynamic range to worry about. Simon told me that Kyung-Wha Chung thought it one of her best ever recordings in terms of capturing the sound of her instrument.

When you have complex orchestral forces in a concerto, however, 16 bit really struggles no matter how you mic the instrument. If you stick a mic a couple of feet away, you are never going to capture a realistic concert perspective but stick them too far away and it amazing how much you will lose with the 16 bit limitation versus the 24 bit limitation. It is the subtle things the audience ear hears at a live performance - even 15 rows back - versus the recording. You lose the minute details of the way the bow and string sounds as the bow direction is changed, you lose timbre and as another poster said, you lose some of that "woody" sound. Unfortunately, however, there is not a massive amount of violin material out there yet that is recorded natively at 24/192 or the best DSD and available to consumers in that format. But what I do have does a better job with a violin than most analogue does and definitely much better than the 16 bit downloads the companies also make concurrently available. So I guess at the present time I could summarise by saying analogue still does violin sound the best in a chamber setting, whilst 16 bit is inferior but competent in such a setting. In the concert hall, 16 bit performs poorly, analogue reasonably well and 24 bit digital very well.

My own recording experience in my own listening room isn't really of any value since I do not own professional recording equipment. I did make some recordings in 2005 I think it was and I used a Sony microphone worth only around $400. I did find it captured the sound best when placed around 4 feet above the violin in a vertical axis and offset by about a foot on the horizontal one (on the "E" string side). Any closer and it accentuated the under-the-ear sound too much and any further away and detail started to get lost. But with an inexpensive microphone and very basic 24 bit gear, this is neither surprising nor is it obviously typical of what a professional engineer would achieve.
 

Purite Audio

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F that's really interesting, I don't believe bit depth has a great deal to do with anything though, 16 bits is enough to reproduce everything we hear , although I believe recording in 24 bit makes a good deal of sense.
Again my point was that live performance is one thing, the reproduction of that performance quite another..
Keith.
 

spazmatron

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fantastic post fiddle faddle (nothing nonsense about it;)), really enjoyed reading it thank you:)
 

scouter

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Al,
Do you know what MIT cables Goodwins was using? Just wondering, as their line stretches the gamet from high dollar to obscenely expensive with the addition of the consoles. Awesome write up- I feel I was there with you guys, and also feel the pangs of no Spectral in my room at the moment.
Thanks
Barry
 

Barry2013

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Thanks FF.
I really enjoyed reading your post and I learn't a lot from it.
What more can I say!
A while back I bought the Pentatone SACD of Julia Fischer J.S. Bach Sonatas and Partitas for solo violin BMV 1001 - 1006 which I find very good but you would probably be a more reliable witness.
Keep up the good work.
 

Enatai252

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Mar 2, 2013
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image.jpeg
Enatai252,

Fantastic! It is a little ironic that gear worth as much as a luxury car comes packed in two cardboard boxes and the cables in a wooden one! (yes, I realise they are extremely well packed nonetheless).

I don't want to divert the thread too much, but was that your personal specific choice of cables or was it something recommended to you that synergises with the dCS gear?

I have been using the Valhalla cables with my Vivaldi stack so I stuck with them for the analog XLR. Given that the system the Rossini is going into is slightly less resolving than where the Vivaldi is, I went down one level on the clock cables. The Valhalla cable is about the same price as the clock so I guess they can afford the Wooden box and still make money. I actually like the dCS packaging...double boxed with custom foam inserts. I really would rather not pay for fancy packaging...just safe packaging. To tie into this thread and others...while I just have a few hours on the Rossinni system- it does an incredible job on 16/44 material. I can see why the OP had such a remarkable day listening. I still listen to vinyl but given the state of digital playback, I don't feel like I am missing anything when I play a digital RB version on the dCS systems.

Super excited to have added this level of SQ to the system
 
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Fiddle Faddle

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Aug 7, 2015
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Thanks for the reply. Enjoy it whilst I admire it from afar. I would really love to hear some CD material on one of these but I am not one who is particularly discerning on systems with which I am not familiar. But I am sure if I stuck it at the front end of something I am very familiar with, I would certainly appreciate it.

I've even noticed on a few recent Decca Mercury Living Presence vinyl reissues I have bought (remastered at Abbey Rd from Wilma Cozart-Fine's original 16/44.1 masters no less), what a very good DAC is capable of. At Abbey Rd they are using "mere" Benchmark DACs with external clocks and the results are very good. So it is amazing to think what the dCS equipment can achieve.
 

ack

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May 6, 2010
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The best recording I have ever heard as regards what a violin really does sound like is a Cisco reissue on vinyl of Heifetz playing the Beethoven Kreutzer sonata. It is exceptional - you really do feel like you are in the room with him. I've heard nothing better in this respect. And if I am impressed with it on a modest Project RPM9 / Rondo Bronze front end, it would be even better again on higher quality gear.

http://store.acousticsounds.com/d/3...ethoven_Kreutzer_Sonata-180_Gram_Vinyl_Record

I got this LP yesterday, and it is absolutely stunning indeed; I have never heard violin like this from any recording before, not even the recently lauded Janaki Trio from Yarlung. Thanks for the pointer. I bet this was recorded with tubes - they do stuff like that so well... Such drama, high frequency content, presence, power... incredible
 

jeromelang

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Dec 26, 2011
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To be honest, I found the timbre or tonal of violin when I watched BBC promos on Tv is more accurate than any hi end hifi. I wonder whether most modern classical recordings have too much processing.

tv speakers better preserve the time/phase relationship throughout their (limited) entire spectrum than most of the hi-end speakers that people here use.

Perhaps you are just more sensitive to this issue than most people are...
 

Fiddle Faddle

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Aug 7, 2015
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I got this LP yesterday, and it is absolutely stunning indeed; I have never heard violin like this from any recording before, not even the recently lauded Janaki Trio from Yarlung. Thanks for the pointer. I bet this was recorded with tubes - they do stuff like that so well... Such drama, high frequency content, presence, power... incredible

And on a system like yours, even I can only imagine... :p

I was actually wondering how that record might compare to some of the very high calibre small companies. I've never heard one of Edward Pong's open reel recordings for instance.
 

MadFloyd

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I got this LP yesterday, and it is absolutely stunning indeed; I have never heard violin like this from any recording before, not even the recently lauded Janaki Trio from Yarlung. Thanks for the pointer. I bet this was recorded with tubes - they do stuff like that so well... Such drama, high frequency content, presence, power... incredible

I have quite a few Heifetz and figured this might not be that different in terms of sound quality, but you mentioning it in the same sentence as the Janaki Trio has me willing to consider the $50 they want for it...
 

ack

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I have quite a few Heifetz and figured this might not be that different in terms of sound quality, but you mentioning it in the same sentence as the Janaki Trio has me willing to consider the $50 they want for it...

It's closely miked and the image is shifting as he moves around with no real sense of space, but at the same time he's right there in front of you in your own typical anechoic living room, and it would not be an exaggeration to say I thought I was listening my neighbor's Guarneri http://www.borromeoquartet.org/artist.php?view=news&nid=739
 

PeterA

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Dec 6, 2011
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I've owned that Cisco Music reissue of Heifetz playing Kreutzer for a couple of years. I've got S/N: 0887. I thought it was good, but I don't think I've heard it since I upgraded my analog front end. Will have to check it out this weekend. For violin, I usually go for my Gidon Kremer on Philips.

IMG_1639.jpg
 

MadFloyd

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MadFloyd

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I've owned that Cisco Music reissue of Heifetz playing Kreutzer for a couple of years. I've got S/N: 0887. I thought it was good, but I don't think I've heard it since I upgraded my analog front end. Will have to check it out this weekend.

I look forward to your thoughts, Peter.
 

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