A CD that is Multichannel


I just bought a CD, Angel CDQ 7243 5 55199 2 4 (good grief what a number) that is the 1994 Broadway cast recording of "Carousel". As it was playing I noticed on the cover the "Dolby Surround" logo. I went over to the prepro, which was set on 2 channel analog input, selected digital input and Dolby, and Bingo! Multichannel. Not bad either.

I didn't know that any CDs were multichannel. Does this conform to the Redbook specs? Are there other discs like this?
eldartford
Dolby Surround is 2-channel, with some rear-hall ambient information mixed in the 2 front channels, reverse-phased. The DS decoder senses the out-of-phase info and sends it to the mono surround channel usually played by 2 channels of amps and speakers. This is a 'matrix' system, same as the QS and SQ 4-channel systems of the '70s.

I had an RCA CD of Mancini movie music that was mixed in Dolby Surround, and at least some of the RCA Classic Film Score Series CDs were mixed in Dolby Surround.
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Delos issued a number of Dolby Surround CDs and I also have a few from RCA!!

Kal
Jeffreybehr...It's more than that. A quick check of track 1 of this CD, (Overture) using my Behringer DEQ2496 analysers shows rear channels within a few dB of the front left and right, and a center channel signal that is about 6 dB down from the fronts (still quite a strong signal).
El, are you using some sort of signal processing? CDs really have just TWO channels. Maybe your processor is making more than what's there?
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Jeffreybehr...Yes, my processor is taking the digital data stream from the CD and applying Dolby PL2 processing. That's how Dolby works. I can do this with any disc. But the result with this particular disk is far and away more effective, and the "Dolby Surround" logo indicates that some deliberate effort was made in this direction when the disc was created.

I admit to being a bit puzzled. I could take issue with your statement that "CDs really have just TWO channels"...actually they have one digital data stream, and some kind of processing is always needed to make music out of it. This is unlike, for example, a mag tape recording where there really are two distinct tracks of information.

The bottom line is that whatever they did to this disc is a good idea.