If you were playing two CD’s of the same recording and it was doing this it would be strange.
However - If you are playing two different CD’s then sound stage should be very different from CD to CD in order to reflect the "venue" - or the "venue" the sound engineer is trying to emulate.
You mentioned the resolution had chaned/improved - that would definitely affect the sound stage as follows...
Sound stage depends on the sound engineering applied to the recording and the precision of the recording. e.g. Large venues should sound BIG and intimate smaller venues should be reflected accordingly
Hope that makes sense - Steve
However - If you are playing two different CD’s then sound stage should be very different from CD to CD in order to reflect the "venue" - or the "venue" the sound engineer is trying to emulate.
You mentioned the resolution had chaned/improved - that would definitely affect the sound stage as follows...
- wider and deeper image
- improved artist placement with greater location precision
- instruments may sound softer or louder depending on whether the change in sound stage moved them forward or backwards within the image
- changes to venue acoustics (i.e. echoes and reverberations)
- More details
Sound stage depends on the sound engineering applied to the recording and the precision of the recording. e.g. Large venues should sound BIG and intimate smaller venues should be reflected accordingly
Hope that makes sense - Steve