Idiotic statement of Jim Austin--".....an album shouldn't sound like live music unless it was recorded to sound like that."
Why are albums recorded NOT to sound like live music? Deliberate distortion like this, antithetical to the live experience of reality, is merely a toy at best. The equivalent in visual art is throwing a paint can on a canvass and calling it great art. Why would a sane person throw the price of a nice house into playback of such crappy deliberate distortion recordings?
Austin' statement is true--"99.99% of Pop studio recordings will NEVER sound---couldn't POSSIBLY sound---like live unamplified acoustic music." These pop recordings are created mainly for teenagers to have fun with that type of music and who don't care about high fidelity. Natural unamplified instruments sound more exciting than when they are deliberately distorted on these recordings. The pity is that the listeners to these bad recordings and bad pop/rock concert PA systems don't have sufficient exposure to natural sound to appreciate what I have said.
"The absolute sound" of course varies with the acoustics of the venue and seating position. As an experienced performer, my most exciting listening has come from immersion at close distances. Maximum detail is revealed close up, and greatest appreciation of the intricacies of the music is obtained. Greater distances allow acoustics to cause time smearing and loss of musical detail. Similarly, recordings with a close perspective offer more musical understanding from greater detail, than recordings with a distant perspective. Accurate playback of both distant and close perspective natural recordings meet Harry's quest for the absolute sound, but a live experience way back in the hall has lost much of the musical detail, most severely at high freq. I actually prefer an audio system designed for accuracy playing a closely miked recording, to the live distant experience of the natural absolute sound. Am I inconsistent in my values? Possibly, but the real objective is to obtain the greatest understanding of the details of the music. This is best done with live listening at a close distance.