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CAN Dolby Digital decoding better a good stereo pair? I'll wait to see it myself...
With the proposed DVD-Audio format comes the opportunity for multiple channels of high-quality sound. But would you even consider adding more speakers to your two-channel system?
I intend to always keep separate my two-channel dedicated audio system from my home theatre system. I have designed the audio system solely for the high-end reproduction of music; the home-theatre system can deal with the explosions, car crashes, etc.
Give me 7.1 channels now. It would be less expensive to have a total experince with multiple channels than shelling out megabucks for truly 3D speaker systems. More people could afford it and it would be a gateway to more people getting that high end sound.
Multi-channel audio provides many opportunies to ruin a perfectly good performance. Two channel recordings yield widely varying results. Multi-channel recordings will need a well defined standard to avoid an even wider variance.
I have yet to hear any multiple channel systems that are an improvment over two channels. Its a neat trick for about 30 seconds. I have also been to very few live performances where one 1/3 of the performers are behind me. In 1972 I had a quadraphonic system with quad 8 track,turn table, and a really cool joy stick for panning. It was a neat trick for about 30 seconds.
This is one of those things I'll have to ride out for a while, for one basic reason: money. To experience GOOD sound out of all five channels, not to mention the subwoofer, I'd need a powerful, clean amp and a set of five good speakers. I'll be putting myself through college soon, so it may very well be a few years before I can be enveloped in intense music in my own home.
Just wondering: First, is the recording industry really prepared for truly music-oriented surround-sound? I am not really sure if all the extra channels really help to convey the MUSIC to one's ears. Second, I am also afraid that the first generations of multichannel recordings might contain oversimplified, synthesized surround information.
Having heard a high end multi-channel music playpack system demo, I do think the future of audio playback lies in multi-channel. However, I still maintain that a multi-channel MUSIC playback system be separate from a home theater setup.
Issues with tonal matching of both amps and speakers raise their (interesting) heads . . . What center-channel and surround speakers will match Quad ESL-63s? I await with bated breath the upcoming releases from Quad in the hope that an all-Quad and all-electrostatic system will be possible!
I listen to multichannel on my "home theatre" system & while this provides a great deal of added pleasure to the visual experience, I have yet to sit up and take notice of the music reproduced. I don't feel that extra channels on my music-only system would do anything but detract from the intense listening pleasure I experience with 2 channels. (Although I suppose similar comments were in abundance when stereo reproduction first hit the scene!)
I've wanted 3+ channels for a long time, primarily to eliminate the "sweet spot" and allow more than one person to hear a proper soundstage. Three channels of full-range for the front with two lower-bit-rate ambience channels would be just the ticket. As a matter of fact, I've put off buying any new electronics in anticipation of this sort of thing materializing within the next couple of years. Gee, we might FINALLY be able to hear those three-track masters from the '50s properly reproduced, only 40 years late! Manufacturers and software suppliers, stop arguing and let's go!
It seems like a good idea, but it would be nice if some of the higher-end companies would start making 5-channel amps. The day that BAT makes a 5-channel tube amp, I will consider the switch. Also---it seems like, unless recording studios start encoding recordings with the 5.1-channel system, it is pointless to go 5.1-channel unless you are into videos or DVDs. I do admit, though, that it does feel like the next step in music, and I like the idea of surround-sound recordings being done with a distinct listener placing in mind. Can't wait until recording studios and high-end companies get on the ball.
I praise Meridian and Aerial for having vision in the multichannel-for-music field. Multichannel is not just for movies! The Meridian Digital Theatre plays stereo recordings in synthesized surround that is GLORIOUS! I have also heard Meridian gear teamed up with Aerial speakers to similar effect!