In following up some links, I came across this quote from Toole's paper
I'm not sure how to read the bolded statement - anyone help in understanding this?
John,
You have to read the F. Toole book to fully understand it. He also addresses "realistic reproduction" in several sections. IMHO one of the most difficult challenges in interpreting short quotes of Toole writings is separating what refers to stereo or what refers to multichannel. Remember he wrote these and similar thing many times:
Old habits die hard. The introduction of stereo in the 1950s gave us an improved left/right soundstage, but close microphone methods, multitracking, and pan-potting, did nothing for a sense of envelopment—of actually being there. The classical music repertoire generally set a higher standard, having the advantage of the re?ectivity of a large performance space, but a pair of loudspeakers deployed at ±30° or less is not an optimum arrangement for generating strong perceptions of envelopment (as will be explained later, this needs additional sounds arriving from further to the sides). Perhaps that is why audiophiles have for decades experimented with different loudspeaker directivities (to excite more listening room re?ections), with electronic add-ons and more loudspeakers (to generate delayed sounds arriving from the sides and rear), and with other trinkets that seem capable only of exciting the imagination. All have been intended to contribute more of “something that was missing” from the stereo reproduction experience. The solution to this is more channels.
For decades, society has been conditioned to derive pleasure from ?rst single-channel sound (mono) and then two channels (stereo). Only recently has music been offered in multichannel formats that permit a somewhat realistic directional and spatial panorama. Impressed by the novelty that music and movies were available on demand, society appeared to lower its expectations and adapted to the inadequate formats.
The limitations of stereo were evidently inspirational to creative minds. (next paragraph seems to be an attack on the unnamed ESL63 electrostatic dipole...)
(all quotes from Sound Reproduction - my bold)
As I have written before, some people criticize Toole of underestimating and even misrepresenting the real potential of stereo and follow different routes in their developments.
And yes, stereo is living difficult moments in audio forums because its incapability of being a precise and predictable system, but also because some of the best of it became part of the luxury industry. However, as in many luxuries, we can not discard some real and unique improvements just because they are attached to the luxury label.
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