You need to draw the line and decide what is important to YOU.
Exactly!
You need to draw the line and decide what is important to YOU.
Is Live, Unamplified Music the Correct Reference for the Sound of our Audio Systems?
So you really want to try and reproduce LUM?
I just heard Dudamel conduct the Vienna Phil last night at Carnegie in a spectacular all Brahm's program (Academic Festival Overture, Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Brahm's Symphony #1). What I would suggest is doing what I always do after attending a live event. Go home and turn off your system for about a day.
As the Borg say: Lower your shield and surrender your ship. Resistance is futile.
Now there is a audiophile who clearly understands the ginormous differences between live and recorded music. When I was on the chase to "perfection" I would come home from a symphonic performance, put on the same music, maybe even by the same conductor with the same symphony and get massively depressed. A really bad idea.
- Detail Retrieval
Quite a bugaboo, given that many audiophiles think detail is the existence ultime of audio. I like detail, too, but if you go back to live music, it is a lot more cloudy than many audio systems represent. Occasional flashes of marvelous tone and detail emerging from random clouds of ambience. If you are sacrificing soul for absolute detail, it is fine if you just like it that way, but I don’t like throwing out the baby with the bathwater or isolating goals that much.
- Full-range Extension
Lows and highs are difficult to produce all that well, and likely don’t really survive the journey through the microphones/venues that well, so I will settle for an emulation of naturalness.
- Midrange magic
Self explanatory. Never too much midrange magic. Included with that is imaging and tonality. Toobs, anyone?
- Effortless all out dynamic range
A system that does 0 to 120 db with instantaneous speed and full stop is going to be extremely large and expensive, and probably in a large sonic space. Given that most music is compressed in some way, it is likely unnecessary for home audio. Effortless dynamic range also needs to convey the very soft parts with vibrancy and audibility. What criterion is there for all out dynamic range? 120 db at 3Khz is a lot different than 120db at 20 Hz. A system that can do 120db pink noise without much distortion for five seconds with a very low noise floor probably qualifies as full dynamic range.
Most audiophiles who put a true full range uncompressed recording on their systems will likely be embarrassed that they are constantly turning things up or down during the presentation when the dynamics change.
I would peg my own system as having a dynamic range of 108db, which is probably still overkill for an audiophile system with most kinds of recorded music sources. 105 db of dynamic range is probably plenty if you want your neighbors to still like you. Without instrumentation, it is hard to be exact about any particular system.
A 120db system would blow your wig off in certain instances, but I don’t really care or desire those instances.
- Absolutely ruler-flat technical performance
Boring
- Absolutely extended, filigreed highs...but not one iota of harshness
It depends on if the music is intended to be harsh, but I also value my hearing, so a few dots of harshness are OK source dependent but not necessarily required.
I will sacrifice this authenticity to the gods of enjoyment if he harshness is gratuitous.
- Deep propulsive bass
Booty call, gotta have it, but music can be enjoyed with a mere theoretical low end if there are no practical alternatives.
So you really want to try and reproduce LUM?
I just heard Dudamel conduct the Vienna Phil last night at Carnegie in a spectacular all Brahm's program (Academic Festival Overture, Variations on a Theme by Haydn, Brahm's Symphony #1). What I would suggest is doing what I always do after attending a live event. Go home and turn off your system for about a day.
As the Borg say: Lower your shield and surrender your ship. Resistance is futile.
+10000
There are members here who love old fashioned horn speakers who believe that what you said isn't true!!! These same folks seem to be in lala land, IMHO. Comparing LUM to their systems and proclaiming that they can reproduce LUM simply shows us that these guys don't go out to live music enough...or at all! They then have the temerity to claim that 'if' you don't agree with them, then you are not an experienced enough a'phile. What a complete joke!!!!
You don't know what you don't know Davey, simple as that. Better to address me directly than taking cheap shots this way.
david
Show me a single thread that I talk about you behind your back.Really... step back and look in the mirror, my friend.
Show me a single thread that I talk about you behind your back.
david
Did I mention you by name in my above post, but if the shoe fits, LOL!
You didn't have the guts and still hiding behind stupid emojis!
david
I was in Ireland recently , for a wedding..heard tons of unamped music at pubs etc but one performance stuck in my mind..At the wedding reception there was an unamplified bass player and pianist making beautiful music.. what went thru my head after standing right next to the performers was ... the double bass sounds better on my hifi...
(...) Why did I mention the point on the number of records? Everytime I go to a good performance, I come back on youtube and look at different performances of the same piece. If you visit sites like talkclassical, gramophone, violinist etc, you will find loads of recommendations for your favorite classical pieces. There is only one way to gain exposure to so many, and that is streaming. You can then pick a couple of favorites on vinyl.
As an example, read the performances mentioned here on page 5, and see if you feel like listening to them. If you strategised around this, you will need a streamer. If not, for just sonics, vinyl. http://www.gidonkremer.net/uploads/Ludwig_UK-EN_FINAL_0.1.pdf
I was in Ireland recently , for a wedding..heard tons of unamped music at pubs etc but one performance stuck in my mind..At the wedding reception there was an unamplified bass player and pianist making beautiful music.. what went thru my head after standing right next to the performers was ... the double bass sounds better on my hifi...
IMHO this time your obsessive love for vinyl made you shoot in your foot. Pick favorites on vinyl after a concert, reading gramophone or looking around in the net? We almost do not have significant classical performances on vinyl that are not at less 30 years old. Independently of our divergences on sonic aspects of digital and analog, attempting live performances was something that drove me towards digital recordings - I want to listen to current performances by new people and my contemporaneous, not just to the same approved "best performances" selected by audiophiles to audiophiles.
Listening to stereo recorded music is a continuous learning process - our preferences are eventually dictated by our experience.