Thad E Ginathom
Well-Known Member
Hence the vicious audiophile punch-up for that particular seat before each concert :lol:Similarly, one can easily get convinced that a piano sounds RIGHT only in a concert hall when listened from 33.33333 ft away at and angle of ?/2 radians from the axis of the piano and the performer, where you get a reverberation time of ? seconds.
Instruments developed, concert halls developed, composition and performance changed. These things are an essential part of the history of western music. Prof Wright covers this in his Musical Appreciation course, which I am ever-grateful to have found through this forum.The point being that when Wagner's symphonies were composed - they were done after keeping in mind the concert acoustics.
And from a Mahler fan, too!I, quite frankly, don't get your tirade against the high frequencies in rock music!

But it does! My current quest is to find ways to correct the sad fact that my hearing now starts to "roll off" as low as 1k :sad:. I am struggling to understand how to boost those higher frequencies, preserving both the brightness of violin and the sound of cymbals through EQ without loosing the peaks to horrible digital clipping.Hi hats and cymbals ARE High frequency equipment - carrying sound energy till 16 kHz.
Classical music doesn't employ any such equipment and hence roll off at 4 kHz is desirable.
compressed as in MP3, or compressed as in engineered-for-radio-and-teenagers?But this is funny since the most vehement opponents of compressed music are the ones who listen to Classical music - which is mathematically the least complex - and thus compression doesn't lose any musical information.
I don't know about mathematical complexity, but orchestral music has such a wide variety of different sounds combined with such a huge dynamic range... doesn't it beat everything else for almost all kinds of complexity in sound?