Please explain mono


Sorry for my ignorance, but what is the purpose of mono in today's day and age and with about anything available in stereo.  I ask this because i feel that I'm missing something and may be able to learn something. 

Thanks

sandrodg73

The guys who recorded Louis Armstrong's Hot Fives & Sevens all wore ties to work and worked in mono. That's why their work sounds great nearly 100 years later. 

@wolfie62 

WOW…400 mono records! 

Your dedication to achieving the best possible mono playback is quite remarkable and awe-inspiring. I am still baby-stepping my way to optimizing monaural Vinyl playback. Hoping to wrap up my setup with a secondary GrooveMaster 4 tonearm and Miyajima Zero. 

Unless the quality of the stereo version is awful, I'll generally go with those and not the mono. Among those 'awful' stereo versions are those early Beatles records where all the vocals are in one channel. Those I go with mono every time. 

At this point I’d say half my collection of 8,000ish is mono recordings. 78’s, microgrooves, and some lps and 45s. If it was recorded in mono, it should be played back in mono. With repeating others about setup and cartridges (I use Miyajima carts and SUT for all mono playback), what hasn’t been mentioned is the room setup. I have 1 room setup for stereo and a separate for mono. In the mono room I have 8’ between the rear wall and the speaker and use open baffles. The result- the deepest soundstage you can imagine. While stereo imagery is impressive, it feels fake compared to mono imagery. In the mono room you at all about front to back. My point being, mono doesn’t really impress me in the stereo room - so if you have a setup already optimized for stereo, the setup may be the issue.