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10-30-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 21
Post ID: 5766
Reply to: 5719
....some light on the subject....

Before I answer some of the points raised....

I have recently updated my website with details of the microphone - pictures will tell much of the story.

This will answer some questions and raise some more.

The short version of the concept is this: by acoustic impedance matching a greater level of damping is achieved without impeding freedom of movement.

Or it can be viewed as a greater level of freedom of movement without reduction of damping (among other perspectives).

Quite clearly this concept applies to the horn-loading of speakers but in this case the motivation is simple 'damping', within the frequency band of greatest human hearing acuity.

However, the issue of 'damping' is not simply a question of resonance control but rather of basic time-domain (impulse response) - so dynamics, resolution, etc AND resonance are all positively affected.

Regarding the specific implementation in my microphone, this is slightly more complicated as a 'full range' horn would be impossible for many reasons.
So, the microphone is designed to be effective within the previously mentioned critical band of human hearing and, owing to the basic acoustical properties of the design, the microphone is designed to be post-equalised, hence some issues with incorrect post-eq callibration.

In (simplified) theoretical terms, the less time-domain distortion present, the more transparent post-equalisation should be. My clips illustrate this quite well, I think.

Best regards,

Andy

10-30-2007 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 22
Post ID: 5771
Reply to: 5766
Ah, they are horn-loaded after all !!!
Andy, is conical shape and the flange around the moth is just the rational for cheap manufacturing? When a horn acts s a transducer the flange is not a positive thing… It would be very interesting how you select horns characteristics for your microphones.

BTW, a lack of LF in your recording is because of horn crap it off? BTW, do you know that I have horn-microphones in my room for years? I have high resolution db meters attached to Macondo’s horns and when the system is off and somebody talks in the room the meters run almost full scale – the 109dB sensitively and a small room is not a joke…


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
04-29-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 23
Post ID: 7318
Reply to: 5771
Some further examples, recorded at higher sample rate

Regarding the string quartet recording & accompanying graph - an example of 'full range recording' - as I said in the email, this recording shows the hallmarks of a compressed/saturated, close/multi-mic recording.

I would also say that I would be surprised if those sub-frequency LF 'spikes' were anything other than physically transmitted 'rumbling' from the players sitting on the floor (or even passing traffic), transmitted via the microphone stands.

As I said in the email, my microphones are mechanically isolated so that this effect will not be in my recordings.

Also, as I said in my email, the SPL used for playback governs the perceived spectrum - courtesy of the 'equal loudness contours', first published by Fletcher & Munson a long time ago.

My recordings are made for playback at performance SPL, not optimized for small scale speakers at quiet volumes.

In any case, I have recently made some further recordings which might be of interest:

Orchestra A - Orchestra       96/24 44/16 mp3

Orchestra B - Solo piano      96/24 44/16 mp3

Gregorian choir                   96/24 44/16 mp3

Classical Indian ensemble     96/24 44/16 mp3

Tabla                                96/24 44/16 mp3

Sitar                                 96/24 44/16 mp3

Drum kit                            96/24 44/16 mp3


Andy

07-09-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 24
Post ID: 7786
Reply to: 7318
Crapped-off bass

Romy - as it turned out, the 'crapped off bass' that you refered to was in part due to the consumer pre-amp I was using.

I attach an mp3 from a recent session where I recorded using a DAV BG1 into Mytek stereo96 converters. In making the recording with the upgraded mic-amp & converter I noticed immediately that the bass went much lower.

The mic-amp/converter upgrade was a direct result of my customers telling me that their own recordings made with my microphones were far better than my samples (they had similar complaints to yours).

This recording was monitored live in the hall with the orchestra at performance SPL via a pair of Mackie SRM450 speakers and was quite close to the actual sound.

mp3

Andy

07-10-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 25
Post ID: 7787
Reply to: 7786
You should not self-incriminate yourself like this

 Andy Simpson wrote:

Romy - as it turned out, the 'crapped off bass' that you refered to was in part due to the consumer pre-amp I was using.

I attach an mp3 from a recent session where I recorded using a DAV BG1 into Mytek stereo96 converters. In making the recording with the upgraded mic-amp & converter I noticed immediately that the bass went much lower.

The mic-amp/converter upgrade was a direct result of my customers telling me that their own recordings made with my microphones were far better than my samples (they had similar complaints to yours).

This recording was monitored live in the hall with the orchestra at performance SPL via a pair of Mackie SRM450 speakers and was quite close to the actual sound.

Andy, come on,

was it a joke or you are serious? Are you trying to present this Sound as something that has any more or less proper bass? I do not know at witch level of your recording/mastering chain it came to you but this Sound has absolutely revolting bass – juts a pieces of syntactic rubber garbage, sorry to say it. Also, it was incredibly boring play of Tchaikovsky IV. You shell not record music like this.

Rgs, Romy the Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
07-10-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 26
Post ID: 7790
Reply to: 7787
Suggested topics of investigation
 Romy the Cat wrote:

 Andy Simpson wrote:

Romy - as it turned out, the 'crapped off bass' that you refered to was in part due to the consumer pre-amp I was using.

I attach an mp3 from a recent session where I recorded using a DAV BG1 into Mytek stereo96 converters. In making the recording with the upgraded mic-amp & converter I noticed immediately that the bass went much lower.

The mic-amp/converter upgrade was a direct result of my customers telling me that their own recordings made with my microphones were far better than my samples (they had similar complaints to yours).

This recording was monitored live in the hall with the orchestra at performance SPL via a pair of Mackie SRM450 speakers and was quite close to the actual sound.

Andy, come on,

was it a joke or you are serious? Are you trying to present this Sound as something that has any more or less proper bass? I do not know at witch level of your recording/mastering chain it came to you but this Sound has absolutely revolting bass – juts a pieces of syntactic rubber garbage, sorry to say it. Also, it was incredibly boring play of Tchaikovsky IV. You shell not record music like this.

Rgs, Romy the Cat


Romy, I would suggest the following topics of investigation:

1. Psychoacoustics
2. Auditory masking
3. Equal loudness contours of human hearing
4. Recording, mixing & mastering procedure & signal chain of your reference recordings
5. The interaction of all of the above

Best regards,

Andy
07-10-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 27
Post ID: 7791
Reply to: 7790
Well, it is very much not there, sorry…

Andy,

I think you are looking from a slightly wrong perspective. Those topics of investigation are fine but they have nothing to do with the subject of our conversation. You present yourself as a scientific person and I presume that all topics of investigation are incisive with your expertise and experience.   What we are talking about here is not about reasons but about results. The recording that you demonstrated is wrong result. I have no idea if it is your microphones, amps, A/D   possessors or whatever you use but the result is; in my view is way below, the level what it would make send to talk about the equal loudness contours and psychoacoustics. I am sorry to say it but somebody shell say you what it is instead kissing you ass and passing to you stupid compliments – you can get it enough from you other friends.

The recoding you demonstrated (besides of being extremely bad play) has extremely wrong bass – the bass is what you ask me to comment. The bass is too loud – obviously you EQed it as it does not exist as this. Also, the texture of the bass is horrible – it sponge and has a strong and very repulsive rubber signature. Listen the end of the Their movement – was it an orchestra or some kind of Casio $150 electronic keyboard?

Rgs, The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
09-09-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 28
Post ID: 8208
Reply to: 7791
Some further clips
These clips may be more to your tastes, or may cause you to be violently sick - I have no idea, but still I expect to learn something from any feedback.

Early music clip A

Early music clip B

Jazz clip A

Jazz clip B

and also:

choir/organ clip A

With the 'and also' I separate into different microphone amp classes, for interests sake.

Andy
09-10-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,657
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 29
Post ID: 8210
Reply to: 8208
What are you aiming for?
Andy, I will say right away that I am not at all set up to "exploit" online music, but this comes across to me as "clean" and  "noise free", with some nice spacial effects, basically devoid of harmonics, and not much in the way of expresion.  Is this me or you?

Best regards,
Paul
09-11-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 30
Post ID: 8224
Reply to: 8210
Is it you or me? A very interesting question....
 Paul S wrote:
Andy, I will say right away that I am not at all set up to "exploit" online music, but this comes across to me as "clean" and  "noise free", with some nice spacial effects, basically devoid of harmonics, and not much in the way of expresion.  Is this me or you?

Best regards,
Paul


Hi Paul,

This is by far the most sensible question I have heard in a long time. Also, thanks for listening.

I would ask by what do you judge the harmonic content/expression?

I would guess that by harmonics, you may possibly mean 'harmonic distortion'?

If, like Romy, you have developed an advanced reproduction system, and if like Romy, you 'tune' the system to suit your ear, you run the danger of developing a system specifically for the recordings you like.

For example, if you particularly favour the famous Mercury Living Presence recordings, to tune the system for 'ideal' performance according to these recordings would in no small part be in compensation for the fairly drastic time-domain distortion (diaphragm resonance) of the u47/c12/m49 type microphones popular at the time, which shows itself not only in spectral terms but more significantly in timbre. (This is to say nothing of the enormous harmonic distortion of the tube amps, transformers, tape, vinyl, etc).

While these old recordings have a lot in their favour, they should sound almost unlistenable at performance SPL due to the various distortion, especially on the 'ideal' horn system.

More specifically, you cannot avoid having tuned your system to the direct-radiator microphones, which are all that have been available until I began development a relatively short time ago.

I would assume that anybody in here is well familiar with the difference in sound quality between the direct-radiator and the horn-loaded speaker. To my ear this is a very obvious class difference.

Given speakers designed soley for flat frequency response (ie. not tuned by ear) the first thing I would expect you to notice is that my recordings can be differentiated from direct-radiator recordings in exactly the same way as with speakers - a feeling of dynamic freedom.

Given (horn) speakers tuned soley for 'ideal sound quality' on reproduction of direct-radiator recordings, I would expect a critically over-damped system, since the direct-radiator microphones are relatively critically 'under-damped'.

In the course of my work I have found that in the case of critically over-damped systems (especially direct-radiator with very stiff ferrofluid), the extra 'dynamic freedom' in the recordings actually causes the recordings to sound relatively 'muted', as the lack of distortion highlights the mechanical over-damping (which is suited to 'taming' mechanically resonant microphones).

Or, perhaps we are simply talking about equal loudness effects?

These recordings are calibrated for direct comparison with the source at same SPL - they were monitored that way. If we reduce the listening level 20dB we can expect a perceived loss of HF/detail/harmonic content/etc.

Did you try the recordings at realistic performance levels?

Andy
09-11-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,657
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 31
Post ID: 8225
Reply to: 8224
Perfect Sound Forever
Andy, when I said I am not set up to exploit internet "music", I meant just that; I cannot and therefore did not run your samples through my main payback system, although even that might or might not have done justice to your samples according to your own sense of end-to-end equalibrium/continuity, at least based on your response.  Actually, I just listened with what I had and gave you my immediate impressions, which were as I said.  By "harmonics", I mean that notes played by instruments have characteristic tonal/timbral signatures that include both a primary frequency and also various attendent "rider" frequencies that vary considerably in amplitude.  For whatever reason (perhaps my limited playback capabilities), I found the samples somewhat "stripped" or "bleached" of these harmonics as I recognized them live.  As far as "expression", this is hard to describe in binary code, but I'll try to slide one in by saying it is the varibles in sound worked by the performer him/herself, like timing and inflection, which we percieve both consciously and unconsciously in music, just as in speech.  Again, the computer system is lacking, but I can usually get expression in the truck, from my clock radio, etc.  Whether any of what I did/didn't perceive has anything to do with microphones, I have no idea, nor do I presume to so much as hazard a guess in that direction.  I saw your query and answered off the cuff, taking the sound at face value, so my remarks were "detached" from considerations other than just what I did/didn't hear from the samples, whatever the reasons.

Hence the question you include in your header. I am perfectly willing to accept that my playback is poor enough to make the absence of the cited-as-absent traits mea culpa.

I do find your observations about the "sacred" microphones very interesting, however.  I have had a few chances to hear playback from tracks gotten via different "classic" microphones, and it was "instructive", to say the least.

Best regards,
Paul S
09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 32
Post ID: 8227
Reply to: 8224
Hearing, not listening?
The Realistic Painter

"Completely true to nature!" - what a lie:
How could Nature ever be constrained into a picture?
The smallest bit of Nature is infinite!
And so he paints what he likes about it.
And what does he like: he likes what he can paint!

Nietzsche

--

Hello Andy,

I think your approach to audio leaves out the very important fact that recording (and reproduction) are very limited and that sound monitoring and reproduction goals are not one and the same.
For this reason, the pursuit absolute neutrality (focusing more on the 'physical' aspects of the sound) will do little in the way of recreating a performance, since a recording is nothing more than a synthesized version of the original event. I would describe this neutral sound as a skeleton with little or no flesh, therefore lifeless.

Cheers,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 33
Post ID: 8228
Reply to: 8225
Further thoughts

 Paul S wrote:
Andy, when I said I am not set up to exploit internet "music", I meant just that; I cannot and therefore did not run your samples through my main payback system, although even that might or might not have done justice to your samples according to your own sense of end-to-end equalibrium/continuity, at least based on your response.  Actually, I just listened with what I had and gave you my immediate impressions, which were as I said.  By "harmonics", I mean that notes played by instruments have characteristic tonal/timbral signatures that include both a primary frequency and also various attendent "rider" frequencies that vary considerably in amplitude.  For whatever reason (perhaps my limited playback capabilities), I found the samples somewhat "stripped" or "bleached" of these harmonics as I recognized them live.  As far as "expression", this is hard to describe in binary code, but I'll try to slide one in by saying it is the varibles in sound worked by the performer him/herself, like timing and inflection, which we percieve both consciously and unconsciously in music, just as in speech.  Again, the computer system is lacking, but I can usually get expression in the truck, from my clock radio, etc.  Whether any of what I did/didn't perceive has anything to do with microphones, I have no idea, nor do I presume to so much as hazard a guess in that direction.  I saw your query and answered off the cuff, taking the sound at face value, so my remarks were "detached" from considerations other than just what I did/didn't hear from the samples, whatever the reasons.

Hence the question you include in your header. I am perfectly willing to accept that my playback is poor enough to make the absence of the cited-as-absent traits mea culpa.

I do find your observations about the "sacred" microphones very interesting, however.  I have had a few chances to hear playback from tracks gotten via different "classic" microphones, and it was "instructive", to say the least.

Best regards,
Paul S

Hi Paul,

Perhaps I can send you a CD of the tracks in question? - the files linked above are CD format .WAV files if you can download & 'burn' to CD? Does your main system play CDs?

Regarding expression, harmonics (& or harmonic distortion) I do not doubt your observation for a second - nor question the validity.

However, if you can usually get 'expression' from recordings via the playback systems you mentioned, I would look to the recordings themselves.

For example, almost all recordings available today have severe distortion, which in most cases is to some extent intentional. Compression, for example, is routinely applied (for example, DG have hardly had a recording without compression EVER - I have this first hand from their chief engineer of 18 years).

The mastering industry is also routinely applying 'transparent limiting' to 'raise the level' by 'a few dB', for classical music.

Also, regarding expression & harmonics, would you expect to be able to have 'real performance' expression at anything less than real performance SPL?

At least according to equal loudness effects, I would expect not, but this is your term so perhaps I am wrong.

Regarding the 'classic' microphones, you need only look to the monitoring of those who describe the microphones as 'classic', and to their monitoring habits (low volume, often near-field) to begin to understand how the very distortions of the microphones are welcome 'compensation' for these monitoring habits.

Andy

09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 34
Post ID: 8230
Reply to: 8227
The Seventh Chanel of Macondo.
 tuga wrote:
The Realistic Painter

"Completely true to nature!" - what a lie:
How could Nature ever be constrained into a picture?
The smallest bit of Nature is infinite!
And so he paints what he likes about it.
And what does he like: he likes what he can paint!

Nietzsche

--

Hello Andy,

I think your approach to audio leaves out the very important fact that recording (and reproduction) are very limited and that sound monitoring and reproduction goals are not one and the same.
For this reason, the pursuit absolute neutrality (focusing more on the 'physical' aspects of the sound) will do little in the way of recreating a performance, since a recording is nothing more than a synthesized version of the original event. I would describe this neutral sound as a skeleton with little or no flesh, therefore lifeless.

Cheers,
Tuga


Hi Tuga,

I have no argument here.

My main test procedure is to set up the monitors either side of the source and match playback SPL for direct blind comparison.

If the blind listening subjects cannot tell which is real and which is not, then I can ask no more.

The rest is up to the suspension of disbelief mechanism and is outside of my field.

Andy
09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Romy the Cat


Boston, MA
Posts 10,156
Joined on 05-28-2004

Post #: 35
Post ID: 8231
Reply to: 8230
The Seventh Channel of Macondo
 Andy Simpson wrote:
Not recreate the performance but only the mechanical stimulus at the ear….
Well, if my project with the Macondo 7th Channel will go successfully then I would very battle this notion of “stimulus for the ears”. The Cat


"I wish I could score everything for horns." - Richard Wagner. "Our writing equipment takes part in the forming of our thoughts." - Friedrich Nietzsche
09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 36
Post ID: 8232
Reply to: 8231
Details?
 Romy the Cat wrote:
 Andy Simpson wrote:
Not recreate the performance but only the mechanical stimulus at the ear….
Well, if my project with the Macondo 7th Channel will go successfully then I would very battle this notion of “stimulus for the ears”. The Cat


Is this 7th channel physical or conceptual?

Or are you talking about a physically coupled vibration system? (will you strap a servo-woofer to your chest?).

Andy
09-12-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Paul S
San Diego, California, USA
Posts 2,657
Joined on 10-12-2006

Post #: 37
Post ID: 8233
Reply to: 8228
A vs. B vs. Time
Well, you can count me among those who are perennially frustrated by all the unnessary stupidy that goes into most recordings, that's for sure, although I have several hundred records that I would like to keep for the perfromances that somehow survived the processing.

I do have redbook CD playback in my main system, as soon as I fix the short in my DAC, but I have always in the end preferred LPs, despite their very obvious flaws, not to mention the tedious playback rituals.

Of course I would like "better recordings", including better monitoring, in the rote, physical sense.  The weird thing is that some of the best performances I have on on VERY obviously "compromised" recordings, and some of the "best sounding"  recordings are MT of musical content.

Please do not think I am a "musical versus accurate" guy, because I absolutely have no problem with "accuracy" that includes the music.  In fact, I think I prefer it.  But what I just keep coming back to is that the Music has to be there as a first consideration, meaning I am not so sure that close attention to raw data end to end will necessarilly result in music.

I have been involved in some "live versus recorded" trials that I found more interesting for social reasons than for any ultimate conclusions one might draw from them about music.

The most "realistic" sound "reproduction" I have ever heard was many years ago at a Stereophile show in Los Angeles.  They had hired a classical guitarist to wander around the show.  I heard the guy at one point playing some Bach around the corner, but when I rounded the corner he wasn't there.  What was there was Mark Levinson's stacked Quads playing high-speed tape via one of his modified Studers.  I seem to recall he had used one of Bob Fulton's mics; but Time has a way of changing everything.

Best regards,
Paul S
09-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
tuga


Posts 174
Joined on 12-26-2007

Post #: 38
Post ID: 8245
Reply to: 8230
Monitoring environment.
 Andy Simpson wrote:
Hi Tuga,<BR><BR>I have no argument here.<BR><BR>My main test procedure is to set up the monitors either side of the source and match playback SPL for direct blind comparison.<BR><BR>If the blind listening subjects cannot tell which is real and which is not, then I can ask no more.<BR><BR>The rest is up to the suspension of disbelief mechanism and is outside of my field.<BR><BR>Andy


Andy,

I was thinking if it wouldn't be more efficient if you were to monitor the recording in a "controlled" environment.

Isn't it possible that you are duplicating/superimposing room acoustics during your monitoring (affecting bass assessment and overall balance)?

Best,
Tuga


"Science draws the wave, poetry fills it with water" Teixeira Pascoaes
09-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 39
Post ID: 8246
Reply to: 8233
Science vs conjuring
 Paul S wrote:
Well, you can count me among those who are perennially frustrated by all the unnessary stupidy that goes into most recordings, that's for sure, although I have several hundred records that I would like to keep for the perfromances that somehow survived the processing.

I do have redbook CD playback in my main system, as soon as I fix the short in my DAC, but I have always in the end preferred LPs, despite their very obvious flaws, not to mention the tedious playback rituals.

Of course I would like "better recordings", including better monitoring, in the rote, physical sense.  The weird thing is that some of the best performances I have on on VERY obviously "compromised" recordings, and some of the "best sounding"  recordings are MT of musical content.

Please do not think I am a "musical versus accurate" guy, because I absolutely have no problem with "accuracy" that includes the music.  In fact, I think I prefer it.  But what I just keep coming back to is that the Music has to be there as a first consideration, meaning I am not so sure that close attention to raw data end to end will necessarilly result in music.

I have been involved in some "live versus recorded" trials that I found more interesting for social reasons than for any ultimate conclusions one might draw from them about music.

The most "realistic" sound "reproduction" I have ever heard was many years ago at a Stereophile show in Los Angeles.  They had hired a classical guitarist to wander around the show.  I heard the guy at one point playing some Bach around the corner, but when I rounded the corner he wasn't there.  What was there was Mark Levinson's stacked Quads playing high-speed tape via one of his modified Studers.  I seem to recall he had used one of Bob Fulton's mics; but Time has a way of changing everything.

Best regards,
Paul S


I will gladly send you a CD - should you fix the short in your DAC, please let me know. Anybody else unable to download/burn the recordings linked above please feel free contact me for a CD.

I don't think we can entertain the usual kind of 'musical VS accurate' debate to any advantage, since clearly if we approach the poles of either we will find logical contradiction.

However, subjective system tuning is dictated by the recordings used for the tuning - which is almost never accepted or even mentioned by system tuners.

It seems an unspoken assumption among speaker designers that the microphone is beyond reproach.

It may well be that many of the unpleasant attributes, tuned out by many a horn-system tuner, were in fact a sign of correct reproduction of unpleasant recordings.

In my subjective work, I tend to get more positive response from those listening on horn-loaded speaker systems which have not been 'tuned' by ear but to 'flat' measurement. In fact, the more 'ideal' a system sounds with conventional direct-radiator recordings, the less chance it will bring any positive qualities out of a better mechanical performance recording, as the 'ideal' performance is a result of counter measures taken to reduce issues of the recording quality.

Regarding your description of a 'realistic reproduction' experience, this is very interesting and quite to the point.

The most significant aspect to this test is the expectation bias.
 
You see the player, know of the presence of the player, and therefore expect the player to be the source of the sound, regardless of any evidence from the ear to the contrary.

RCA, in the 1930s if I recall correctly, made much of similar tests with orchestra.

For these tests they gathered an audience to watch an orchestra performance and the orchestra 'mimed' along to playback which was being transmitted live from elsewhere.

Apparently, the audience were 'amazed' that they were 'fooled' 'by the speakers'.

Expectation bias, fueled in the most powerful way - visually - renders the test worthless.

Had RCA simply blind-folded the audience and given a randomly selected programme alternating between the real orchestra and the reproduction it is likely, if not certain, that the result would have been total failure. (The fact RCA found it necessary to employ a conductor with a volume control to propery execute the dynamics of the orchestra is clue enough to this - indeed, this is typical of a direct-radiator recording, despite the horns in playback).

This is a conjuring trick, not science, but I'm quite sure you intended to imply that, so please forgive me for spelling it out.

Andy
09-13-2008 Post does not mapped to Knowledge Tree
Andy Simpson
Posts 42
Joined on 10-21-2007

Post #: 40
Post ID: 8248
Reply to: 8245
The difference between 'the same' and 'equally real'
 tuga wrote:
 Andy Simpson wrote:
Hi Tuga,<BR><BR>I have no argument here.<BR><BR>My main test procedure is to set up the monitors either side of the source and match playback SPL for direct blind comparison.<BR><BR>If the blind listening subjects cannot tell which is real and which is not, then I can ask no more.<BR><BR>The rest is up to the suspension of disbelief mechanism and is outside of my field.<BR><BR>Andy

Andy,

I was thinking if it wouldn't be more efficient if you were to monitor the recording in a "controlled" environment.

Isn't it possible that you are duplicating/superimposing room acoustics during your monitoring (affecting bass assessment and overall balance)?

Best,
Tuga


Tuga,

This is a good point and forces me to explain further.

In recognition of the limitations of the pursuit, my first goal of reproduction is not to reproduce exactly an audio event that is indistinguishable from the real audio event.

Not only is this essentially impossible, but it is also essentially impossible to test.

My primary goal is to reproduce something that is indistinguishable from a real event.

In other words, I expect my blind-test subjects to recognise the difference between the real source and the reproduction, but I do not aim for them to know which is the real source.

For example, if we take the case of reproducing a violin, if the reproduction is somewhat spectrally different to the real violin, I would expect the subject to perceive this as two different violins.

Given ideal frequency domain matching between the two, if the subject can pick one as real and the other as reproduction, the test is a failure.

Similarly, in the case of the incorrect ratio of direct-to-indirect sound (reverb), if the source is perceived as real, the extra reverb will likely simply be perceived as just that - extra real reverb.

My work has lead me to the conclusion that mechanical error in transducers is the primary form of unacceptable distortion, and that only mechanical performance equal to or better than the ear will guarantee that the reproduction will be perceived as a real source.

Direct-radiator microphones OR direct-radiator speakers do not qualify and so introduce mechanical distortion which is noticeable to the ear, causing whatever reproduction to appear unreal.

Andy
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