viren bakhshi
Well-Known Member
Hi,
A lot of the agonized auditioning of audio equipment that goes on is brought about by our musical expectations. What satisfies us, or what can even attempt to satisfy us. Do we really know, do we have an idea of what can - or are we groping in the dark?
Here are some comments of visitors to the recent RMAF 2014 show:
Gary Dahl:
"What I heard sounded to me as if there were serious peaks somewhere in the 1-2 kHz region. The string sound was hard and shrill. This wasn't a subtle issue; it drove both Lynn and me from the room in seconds.
"I can't be sure of what was wrong (recording, electronics, speakers, room, etc.), because all I could hear was the end result. My point wasn't to guess at the cause; it wasn't my problem to solve. My main concern was that this was a demonstration by the the exhibitor for a TAS reviewer, which would lead me to expect that the system would be shown off at its best. It's scary to imagine that anyone actually thinks that's what orchestral instruments really sound like."
Lynn Olson:
"Yup, you got that right. Part of the reason that recordings, and some of the gear, from the Fifties sounds the way it does is that people back then went to a lot more live concerts, and played music at home with friends.
"Karna remembers friends coming over and playing music on the piano in the parlor, and she played clarinet in the high school band.
"When people hear live music several times a week, even cheap 5-tube table radios have to be balanced so they are musically acceptable, and the same applies to recordings made in that era. By modern standards, they were technically limited, but people expected recordings to sound like live music."
Well, that is a very good way of achieving that expectation - go listen to live music, and try to replicate that in your home audio system.
No dearth of music around - try out the upcoming Jazz Utsav, for instance.
Viren
A lot of the agonized auditioning of audio equipment that goes on is brought about by our musical expectations. What satisfies us, or what can even attempt to satisfy us. Do we really know, do we have an idea of what can - or are we groping in the dark?
Here are some comments of visitors to the recent RMAF 2014 show:
Gary Dahl:
"What I heard sounded to me as if there were serious peaks somewhere in the 1-2 kHz region. The string sound was hard and shrill. This wasn't a subtle issue; it drove both Lynn and me from the room in seconds.
"I can't be sure of what was wrong (recording, electronics, speakers, room, etc.), because all I could hear was the end result. My point wasn't to guess at the cause; it wasn't my problem to solve. My main concern was that this was a demonstration by the the exhibitor for a TAS reviewer, which would lead me to expect that the system would be shown off at its best. It's scary to imagine that anyone actually thinks that's what orchestral instruments really sound like."
Lynn Olson:
"Yup, you got that right. Part of the reason that recordings, and some of the gear, from the Fifties sounds the way it does is that people back then went to a lot more live concerts, and played music at home with friends.
"Karna remembers friends coming over and playing music on the piano in the parlor, and she played clarinet in the high school band.
"When people hear live music several times a week, even cheap 5-tube table radios have to be balanced so they are musically acceptable, and the same applies to recordings made in that era. By modern standards, they were technically limited, but people expected recordings to sound like live music."
Well, that is a very good way of achieving that expectation - go listen to live music, and try to replicate that in your home audio system.
No dearth of music around - try out the upcoming Jazz Utsav, for instance.
Viren