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Quality is better than quantity!
Last week's results demonstrate the diversity of system approaches when it comes to handling both stereo and multichannel sources. But what are your thoughts about multichannel music itself?
As budding audio heads, my roommate and I and combined our single pairs of speakers on my Hafler for an automotive-like "surround" experience. To our addled sensibilities it was indeed immersive and a blast. But now, having experienced proper immersive two-channel, I can't see both exponentially upping the variables and diluting the resources to achieve a force-fed immersion. I'm looking for magic, not science.
For me, it's the perfect way to listen to music. Unfortunately there are few DVDs (audio/video) or SACDs in multichannel of the kind of music I like. But I have bought many discs just to support the format. I enjoy so much many of them by the way.
There are many reasons I dislike multichannel, the biggest being that I much prefer the "audience" perspective when listening to music. I am also of the opinion that the vast majority of multichannel recordings are gimmicky and very badly done, with the engineers using the format as a tool for careless experimentation. I have listened to many a multichannel recording (I had a well-calibrated multichannel setup at home for two years, ended up selling it) but to these ears (from which I make my living, I am a musician) stereo is vastly superior.
I used to own Yamaha's revolutionary DSP-1 and it was quite promising for its day. Movies do benefit from multichannel systems. There's not much selection when it comes to musicnearly all of the new releases are still coming out on regular CD or even as only MP3 releases! Eeeks! So why spend the extra for multichannel if there's little to play on it? Come on record labels, get with it already! It has potential, but I guess the installed base of required hardware just isn't there yet. Everyone can afford a CD player or DVD player. Not everyone can afford multichannel systems with all the extra amps and speakers.
I don't need no stinkin' multichannel. Not even sure it's necessary for moviesalthough I have it. For music, my two B&W's cost enough where I'm not thinking of purchasing more. I'm a two-channel kind of guy and I'll live with it. If the recording is up to it you don't need surround.
Remember multichannel experimental music in late '60s using 11 channels in a circular setup? What is this discussion about? Hi-rez has both two-channel stereo and multichannel and let everyone decide which works best. Don't create artificial fight two-channel vs multichannel.
In theory, the thought of warm, enveloping fine music sounds heavenly, but just falls short in reality. The goal of the movie makers is to immerse his/her audience like they are a part of the movie, hence gazillion channel theaters and four-story tall screens. The goal of the musical audio engineer should be to replicate a live front row performance minus the faults. Two different goals. Multichannel+Movies=Great. Multichannel+Music=Not so great.
Not only are the recordings remastered, usually in high resolution audio, but instruments and vocals which were buried in the original mix suddenly pop out of nowhere: George/Gile Martin's remastering of the Beatles music for Love is a sterling example.
None of the options above reflects my opinion, I have a great interest in keep experimenting with multichannel, digital procesing, analog and digital recordings, processors, speakers, and a whole lot of things. We will not know until experimenting with things how much room for improvement is still left in audio and everything else. Being a professional in the industry and having experienced almost everything made for the last 120 years, yes I have also listened to Victrolas, I think that a loy can and has to be done to make hearing music or a radio or TV broadcast . . . good enough. Digital is an impressive tool and is the solution to many things. Multichannel is just another very usefull tool. Adjusting to room acoustics, restoring, in your house and for a few dollars, the quality of an old recording made with poor miking and/or or monitoring, and discovering what an astonishing, impressive or interesting recording and/or performance or speech lies in there, and what can be done with new music, performances and interpretations, acoustics, intruments, software, equipment, is very important. The future IS bright, brighter than EVER. It is a broad spectrum in constant flow that must never end. Enjoy, vinil, analog, digital, one speaker or 8 channels, I remember a Robert Meyer/Thomas Dolby presentation of an 8 channel surround system in an AES convention 15 years ago, very good. The consumer is the driver of the industry as much as the equipment designer or artist. Please let us assume our responsability in all this : investigate, buy, sell, borrow, download demos, experiment, enjoy, talk. When digital processing improves a little bit more, every simple TV will have a very sofisticated EQ and room correction, great spekakers, etc., we will all have good analyzers for free, there are a few out there already, and we need all that. Etc.. Audio is not just sitting tied to a chair listening to some stiff " high end " music or system, is something very important for everything in life, is comunications. Enjoy it and make your future better, wether mono or surround, you will need all of them. We have a long way to go yet.